The Mail on Sunday

MoS leads campaign to make GPs see patients face to face once again

- By Jo Macfarlane

THE Mail on Sunday today launches an urgent campaign to demand that all patients are once again seen face-to-face by their GPs.

Surgeries were ordered by NHS England to move to online and phone consultati­ons at the start of the pandemic, but with the NHS workforce now vaccinated, Covid infections at a low and deaths in single figures, the measures inexplicab­ly remain in place.

The new regime has led to vast swathes of patients feeling all but abandoned by their family doctors, according to more than 1,000 letters and emails received by this newspaper over the past eight months.

But enough is enough: we are calling for health chiefs to change their guidance and reopen GP surgeries before it threatens to cause a spiralling crisis. And more resources should be made available to allow all family doctors to do this safely.

GP leaders claim the proportion of appointmen­ts being held in person is recovering: NHS Digital statistics show the number of patients being seen in person in March had doubled to 15 million, compared to April last year.

But figures uncovered by this newspaper show that only a third of these were actually with GPs – the remainder were with nurses and other healthcare staff.

Remote consultati­ons may have been convenient to many. But medical insiders and readers alike have confirmed that GP services in some areas are now so difficult to access by phone that desperate patients are calling NHS 111 – leaving operators with no choice but to instruct them to attend A& E for everyday problems.

Meanwhile, some patients have been hospitalis­ed with conditions which could have been easily treated at home if they had been caught earlier.

In one harrowing account, a 75-year-old grandmothe­r died after sepsis – an immune system condition that requires urgent treatment – was mistaken in a phone consultati­on for a chest infection.

In another, a grandmothe­r in her 50s developed a swelling in her groin, blisters and unexplaine­d weight loss, but was repeatedly denied an examinatio­n. Months later, she was diagnosed with latestage blood cancer and is now fighting for her life in hospital.

According to Dr Alison George, a GP who chose to begin working in A&E last year after her practice elected to continue with remote appointmen­ts, the current situation is ‘failing patients’ and is ‘like practising medicine blindfolde­d’.

‘This is a catastroph­e waiting to happen,’ she said, adding that GPs would undoubtedl­y miss sympt oms, such as problems with walking or weight loss, if they can’t see patients.

Worryingly, even when presented with compelling evidence about the harm the new ‘ digital first’ approach is causing, health chiefs have indicated things may never return to how they were. An NHS England paper published in March says that even more appointmen­ts should be online in future – with some surgeries making web forms the only way to book appointmen­ts. Yet almost half of over-75s – about two million Britons – are not online, according to new Age UK data.

Caroline Abrahams, charity director at Age UK, warned against ‘sleepwalki­ng’ into a world where only the internet-savvy can access healthcare, saying: ‘Online and telephone consultati­ons can work well for some of us, but if you aren’t sure what’s wrong with you, or find it difficult or impossible to manage a video or online consultati­on, or are too hard of hearing to communicat­e effectivel­y over the phone, they are a complete nightmare.’

The Mail on Sunday’s resident GP Dr Ellie Cannon said: ‘While many larger surgeries have remained open, seeing patients face-to-face throughout the pandemic, others were unable to do so safely. Now the threat of Covid is receding, GPs must be allowed to return to a way of working that suits their communitie­s. Whether an appointmen­t is by phone or in person should always be a shared decision made by the patient and doctor.’

Speaking to The Mail on Sunday’s Medical Minefield podcast last week, the chair of the Royal College of GPs, Professor Martin Marshall, acknowledg­ed that both staff and patients were unhappy.

He said: ‘ There simply aren’t enough GPs to provide the kind of care we used to provide. And it doesn’t seem fair to be blaming GPs for what is essentiall­y a lack of resources. Fundamenta­lly this is a crisis which only policymake­rs can sort out.’

An NHS England spokesman said GP ‘ teams’ were offering faceto-face appointmen­ts, and added that the NHS would ‘continue to regularly review the process for accessing appointmen­ts’.

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