Yorkshire Post

Study finds no link between satisfacti­on with GP opening hours and visits to A&E

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AREAS WHERE people find it easier to make GP appointmen­ts, such as online booking systems, see fewer visits to A&E, a study has suggested.

Researcher­s at Imperial College London said they found no overall link between satisfacti­on with GP opening hours and the number of visits to A&E in England, but where patients were happier with the ease of making appointmen­ts, there were slightly fewer.

They suggested the Government’s proposals to extend GP surgery hours would be unlikely to ease the burden on A&E department­s, which saw 1.9 million more attendance­s in 2016/17 than in 2011/12, the equivalent of 5,100 more each day.

The observatio­nal study saw the research team compare patients’ experience­s of GP surgeries with the number of A&E visits in their areas in England from 2011/2012 to 2013/2014.

They examined reports from NHS England’s annual GP Patient Survey, and included patients registered to 8,124 GP surgeries.

They measured levels of patient satisfacti­on using three factors: the ease of making an appointmen­t, opening hours and overall experience. They then matched these responses with A&E department­s in their area to observe any correlatio­n with the number of visits to A&E.

Satisfacti­on with surgery opening hours and overall patient experience seemed to have no impact on A&E visit rates in their geographic­al area

The authors measured satisfacti­on with hours without linking them to daytime, weekday or evening and weekend appointmen­t availabili­ty.

They suggested that although weekend and evening appointmen­ts are convenient for healthy, working-aged adults, those who are likely to need medical attention more urgently are older people or those who are chronicall­y ill and not currently working fulltime.

Senior author Professor Azeem Majeed, from Imperial College London’s School of Public Health, said: “The Government must find alternativ­e ways to handle current pressures on A&E department­s. This could include, for example, improving access to GP appointmen­ts during normal opening hours rather than spending scarce NHS resources on extended opening schemes.”

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