West Sussex Gazette

Call for in-person GP appointmen­ts to be the default option once again

NHS has urged GPs to offer more face-to-face consultati­ons

- Staff Reporter ws.letters@jpimedia.co.uk

Fewer than two thirds of GP appointmen­ts in West Sussex were held face-toface after major steps to ease coronaviru­s restrictio­ns went ahead, figures reveal.

Charity The Patients Associatio­n has called for in-person appointmen­ts to be the default option, after it found patients nationally had struggled to access primary care in ‘ways that met their needs’ throughout the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Data from NHS England shows 402,000 GP appointmen­ts were carried out in June within the NHS West Sussex CCG area, 63 per cent of which involved a face-to-face meeting. That was the same as in May.

NHS England issued guidance to GP practices in May urging them to offer more face-to-face appointmen­ts. But across England, just 56 per cent of consultati­ons were held in person in June – a steep drop from June 2019 at 81 per cent.

However, it was an improvemen­t on the 47 per cent recorded in June 2020.

The NHS cautioned a small number of appointmen­ts held via video call may have been logged as face-to-face appointmen­ts by GPs.

Rachel Power, chief executive of The Patients Associatio­n, said the charity welcomed the move to require practices to offer more in-person appointmen­ts to patients who want them, but investment was needed to ensure accessibil­ity of primary care in the event of future pandemics.

“Phone appointmen­ts, which is the other way most patients consult with their GPs, have become more common, and some patients like and will prefer them in future.

“But the pandemic shows the consequenc­es of not investing adequately in the NHS.”

The Royal College of GPs said GPs has worked hard to ensure the same level of care via remote consultati­ons during the coronaviru­s crisis, but warned general practice should not become a remote

Dr Gary Howsam, vice chairman, said: “GP practices, like other healthcare environmen­ts, are high risk for disease transmissi­on and are at the centre of delivering care to vulnerable patients, so it is still vital to maintain infection control.

“Face-to-face consulting is a core part of general practice, and ideally, post-pandemic, we want decisions about consultati­on methods to be a joint one made between patients and practice teams.”

Separate figures from a survey carried out by the British Medical Associatio­n revealed more than a third of GPs nationally have faced ‘recent abuse’ from patients, with nearly two-thirds of those receiving abuse saying they believed the perpetrato­r was dissatisfi­ed with the service, including access.

“It is entirely unacceptab­le for anybody working in general practice to be at the receiving end of any sort of abuse,” Dr Howsam added.

An NHS spokesman said service postpandem­ic.

GPs carried out 275million appointmen­ts during the pandemic, half in person and on the same or next day.

“GPs and practice staff such as nurses, physiother­apists and paramedics, will continue to offer patients the choice of face-to-face and remote appointmen­ts and in June almost 27 million appointmen­ts were delivered – in line with prepandemi­c levels,” they said.

The Department for Health and Social Care said the Government was grateful for the ‘tireless’ efforts of GPs and their teams.

A spokesman said: “The Government has invested £270million to expand GP capacity so they can cope with the increased demands and recovery pressures as a result of Covid-19, and this comes on top of the £1.5billion for extra staff committed for general practices until 2023-24.”

For all the latest news from across West Sussex, visit our website at www. westsussex­today.co.uk – and www.facebook.com/ WSGazette on Facebook.

 ?? ?? Fewer than two thirds of West Sussex GP appointmen­ts were face-to-face in June. Picture by Getty Images
Fewer than two thirds of West Sussex GP appointmen­ts were face-to-face in June. Picture by Getty Images

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