The Daily Telegraph

Four-week waits for GP appointmen­ts at record high

- By Michael Searles and Ben Butcher

Four-week waits for a GP appointmen­t hit a record high in 2023, NHS figures show.

More than 17.6 million appointmen­ts took place at least 28 days after being booked in England in 2023.

It is the highest on record, accounting for more than one in 20 of the almost 348 million appointmen­ts that GP teams delivered in 2023.

Patient groups said the figures showed “how the family doctor is fast becoming an endangered species”, while MPS called it “scandalous”.

A report by the King’s Fund think tank earlier this week found that access to GP, dental and other community services was the public’s biggest complaint about the NHS.

About 50,000 people every day in 2023 had appointmen­ts that they had been forced to wait more than a month for, the data showed.

This was up by 38 per cent on 2022, when 12.8 million appointmen­ts took place more than 28 days after booking - 3.9 per cent of the total - and up on the previous record of 15.2 million set in 2019.

The NHS says it is delivering more GP appointmen­ts than ever and that some non-urgent appointmen­ts, such as vaccinatio­ns, are booked f urther in advance.

But despite conducting more appointmen­ts in 2023 than any previous year, the fewest proportion of them were delivered on the same day since 2019, at just 43 per cent.

Almost one in five patients were waiting for more than two weeks as 61 million patient appointmen­ts took place more than 14 days after being booked which was up by a fifth on 2022.

In 2023, Steve Barclay, then health secretary, said all non-urgent appointmen­ts should be delivered within two weeks and anything urgent should be on the same day a patient requested it.

The NHS has had a year of repeated strikes by junior doctors, including some GPS. Surgeries also saw an influx of patients whose hospital appointmen­ts and procedures had been cancelled.

Dennis Reed, director of the over-60s campaign group Silver Voices, said: “These are appalling and shameful statistics which reveal how the family doctor is fast becoming an endangered species.

“Few medical conditions which are not routine check-ups can sustain a four-week wait without becoming more serious and costing the NHS more in the long term. Primary care is disintegra­ting before our eyes and we will soon

have GP deserts like the situation in NHS dentistry.”

He called on political leaders to come up with a recovery plan “that doesn’t take the next decade to achieve” and to make a timely face-to-face appointmen­t “a legal right”.

In December, 2023 two-thirds of appointmen­ts were in person, the lowest proportion of any month since August 2022. Overall in 2023 69 per cent of appointmen­ts were in person.

A recent study of remote GP appointmen­ts by the University of Oxford found that “deaths and serious harms” had occurred because of wrong or missed diagnoses and delayed referrals.

Analysis of the national GP patient survey by the IPPR think tank found that one in eight people who could not get a doctor’s appointmen­t went to A&E instead.

The data covers all appointmen­ts carried out by GP staff including doctors, nurses and physician associates. The proportion of appointmen­ts carried out by a family doctor fell from 49 per cent in 2022 to 46.5 per cent in 2023.

Dame Andrea Leadsom, the health minister for primary care, said the latest data showed the Government had “met our target of 50 million additional general practice appointmen­ts several months ahead of schedule”.

She said the NHS workforce plan would “transform GP services nationwide” with 6,000 extra training places for GPS by 2031, while the Pharmacy First initiative, where pharmacist­s can diagnose and treat seven common conditions, would also free up slots.

However, a report by the King’s Fund, published on Wednesday, called for a radical overhaul of GP services to stop the exodus of doctors.

The report revealed that while the number of consultant­s working in hospitals had increased by 18 per cent since 2016-17, the number of GPS had grown by just 4 per cent, despite the record demand caused by an ageing population with more complex health needs.

The report concluded that the lack of investment in GP services “must rank as one of t he most si gnificant and long-running failures of policy and implementa­tion in the NHS and social care over the past 30 years”.

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