Sunday Express

THE QUEEN’S FORMER DOCTOR CALLS ONLINE ONLY GP CHECK-UPS ‘UNSAFE’

- By Lucy Johnston HEALTH EDITOR

THE QUEEN’S former doctor last night called on GPS to hold more face-to-face appointmen­ts and stop defaulting to “unsafe” virtual consultati­ons as the country moves out of the pandemic.

Sir Richard Thompson, former president of the Royal College of Physicians, said the need for online assessment­s, introduced in an effort to slow the spread of Covid, was now no longer necessary in a vaccinated country.

He called for “as many as possible” in-person appointmen­ts after Greater Manchester’s senior coroner ruled lack of faceto-face medical care had contribute­d to at least five deaths and warned more could occur unless action is taken.

Sir Richard spoke out as the chairman of the Royal College of GPS insisted doctors would continue to hold almost half of all appointmen­ts virtually.

He said: “As a doctor seeing a patient in person can give you vital clinical cues.

“This could be the way they walk in the room, shake your hand and how they are looking.

“It is sad so many appointmen­ts have gone online because you can miss important health informatio­n you cannot get from a virtual consultati­on and this can be unsafe. I understand some younger people with money and less time are prepared to use an online private GP service especially if all they want is a repeat prescripti­on.

“However, for many people, especially those who are older or with multiple health problems, this can be problemati­c.

“The Royal College of GPS should force a conversati­on with its members to move back to as many face-to-face appointmen­ts as possible.

“This is more likely to work than an unwisely worded government diktat which raises the hackles of NHS staff.”

He added: “I don’t think the excuse of Covid is now justified.

“Doctors have now had the vaccine, their risks are very low.

There has always been a risk that doctors can pick up infections such as hepatitis B, or TB in the past. Patients do transmit sometimes but it should be an accepted part of the job.”

But last night, the chairman of the Royal College of GPS, Prof Martin Marshall, said there would be a mix of face-to-face and remote consultati­ons.

He added appointmen­ts in person would probably not return to pre-pandemic levels – which was 80 per cent of assessment­s. It currently stands at 57 per cent.

Prof Marshall told the Sunday Express it was likely only 55 per cent of patients would be offered face-to-face sessions and around 45 per cent of appointmen­ts would remain by phone or e-consultati­on after the pandemic because of GP shortages and increased demands.

He admitted it was hard for GPS to maintain a “safe level of

service” because of the added pressures of the pandemic – including the vaccine and booster rollouts, the post-lockdown spike in patients seeking help, as well as a drop in numbers of general practice staff.

This pressure, he said, was also increased with a continued need for Covid-related measures such as social distancing which meant family practices could not operate as before.

Prof Marshall added: “I don’t deny there is a problem, but that problem lies with successive government­s.

“It is unfair to blame GPS for being put under impossible pressures with chronic underfundi­ng and increased demands due to the pandemic.

“We will probably not go back to the previous 80-20 split level of face-to-face versus remote consultati­ons. I think we will end up with around 55 per cent of consultati­ons that are face to face, but this will depend on the needs of the patients in every practice.”

He added: “We are still in the middle of a pandemic and so doctors have a duty to be cautious about patients when they are also treating people who may be vulnerable to Covid.

“We also have a problem with our workload and our ability to provide a safe service as well as face-to-face consultati­ons.

“We have a rise in consultati­ons as since restrictio­ns were eased, we have the vaccinatio­n and now booster programmes as well as looking after the patients with long Covid and the growing numbers with mental health and financial problems.

“GPS will always do their best for their patients but the number of GPS has not kept pace with volume and complexity of demand.”

Senior coroner for Greater Manchester Alison Mutch has raised her concerns with officials, including the Health Secretary, Sajid Javid, and NHS England, in a series of reports aimed at preventing future tragedies.

She said doctors missed important details in telephone appointmen­ts that may have been spotted if they were seen face to face.

One of the cases highlighte­d was Fadhia Seguleh who committed suicide in her home on February 25.

She had phone call appointmen­ts with her GP about her anxiety and depression, which the coroner warned made it harder to assess her needs.

Ms Mutch also had concerns about the role of remote doctor appointmen­ts in the deaths of three other people,

One died from a fatal blood clot in the lung, another with undiagnose­d Covid and a third from an overdose.

A fifth patient, a frail elderly man with various severe underlying health conditions, died after breaking a bone that wasn’t spotted by hospital doctors and his GP in a telephone consultati­on.

An NHS spokeswoma­n said: “The NHS sends sincere condolence­s to the families affected and will respond to the reports within the time frame set by the coroner.

“Every GP practice must provide face-to-face as well as telephone and online appointmen­ts and continuing to offer all of these methods of consultati­on is part of making primary care as accessible as possible.”

 ?? Picture: RICHARD Gardner/rex/shuttersto­ck ??
Picture: RICHARD Gardner/rex/shuttersto­ck
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Sir Richard wants GPS to see patients
UNSAFE PRACTICE: Sir Richard wants GPS to see patients
 ?? Picture: AJ WATT/GETTY ??
Picture: AJ WATT/GETTY

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