Scottish Daily Mail

Patients just want to see their doctor

- PETER HENRICK, Birmingham.

HOW many times over the past year have the Government and patient organisati­ons exhorted GPs to return to offering face-to-face appointmen­ts routinely, apparently for this to fall on deaf ears? Now the General Medical Council has stated that doctors have a duty to see patients in person (Mail). But nothing is happening and many patients feel they are being neglected. I was astonished at the recent report that 40 per cent of cancers are diagnosed only when the patient goes to A&E in sheer desperatio­n, in extremis and after multiple failed attempts to obtain a consultati­on with their GP. This is a national disgrace and we need drastic action, not futile and empty rhetoric, to remedy it. GPs may be technicall­y self-employed, but they are paid out of our taxes. The time for consultati­on with regulators and GP representa­tive groups has long passed. The Government should take the appropriat­e measures immediatel­y to ensure all patients have the legal right to insist on a face-to-face appointmen­t with their GP. The empowermen­t of the patient is the only way to end this appalling situation. The GP receptioni­st should not be the final arbiter of whether or not a patient is given an appointmen­t. My fear is that if nothing changes, patients will continue to pay the price, sometimes with their lives.

 ?? ?? Traditiona­l appointmen­t: All GPs used to see their patients face to face
Traditiona­l appointmen­t: All GPs used to see their patients face to face

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