The Independent

Surge in demand for private GPs as NHS pressure grows

- REBECCA THOMAS HEALTH CORRESPOND­ENT

Demand for private GPs has soared as patients seek out face-toface appointmen­ts with doctors at short notice.

Spire Healthcare, one of the UK’s largest private healthcare providers, saw 32,000 GP appointmen­ts booked with it last year – up from 23,000 in 2021. The hospital company, which runs

125 GPs, said revenues from its private doctor appointmen­ts rose by 46 per cent in 2022. It said demand was soaring as patients look for “fast access to longer face-to-face appointmen­ts with a GP”.

On the surge in demand, Spire Healthcare boss Justin Ash told The Telegraph: “Clearly there is a well-known problem of GPs being under pressure, the 8am scramble [for appointmen­ts] is a thing. People want to be able to book online and they want to be able to book at short notice.”

In its annual report, Spire Healthcare said the company saw a “continued growth in demand from self-pay patients, and a strong rebound in our private medical insurance business”. It added: “This reflects changing market dynamics, as more people turn to private care to meet their treatment needs. Continued strain on the NHS, manifested in over 7 million people on waiting lists, is clearly a backdrop to this changing demand profile.”

The British Medical Associatio­n has warned the government that GP practices are under “unpreceden­ted pressures and increasing­ly unable to meet the needs of patients”. Data shows the NHS has lost 2,000 full-time GPs since 2015, and according to the BMA the number of GPs working full time has been steadily decreasing since 2017.

In a recent report, the BMA said “the long-term decline in GPs coincides with a rise in patients”. It said: “Whilst there are 2,078 fewer fully qualified FTE GPs today than there were in September 2015, each practice has on average 2,224 more patients than in 2015.”

According to the latest NHS data, the number of same-day appointmen­ts offered by GPs has increased from 10 million in August 2020 to 13 million in January 2023. Overall, face-to-face appointmen­ts account for the largest proportion of GP appointmen­ts with 20 out of 29 million patients seen in person compared to eight million telephone appointmen­ts.

The data shows the majority of GP appointmen­ts, 19 per cent, last between six and 10 minutes. This has remained roughly the

same since the data was first collected in December 2021.

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(PA) Doctors are having to deal with more patients as the number of practition­ers dec lines

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