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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
James Rodger & Sam Elliott-Gibbs

GP change from next month will impact MILLIONS of patients across the UK

An important change is being made to doctors' appointments that is set to impact millions.

A month after it was announced the 8am telephone scramble would be scrapped, another decision has been made.

From May 15, the NHS will implement a change where GPs that cannot offer an appointment right away will be obliged to provide people with an assessment there and then.

Alternatively, they can signpost them to an "appropriate medical service".

Dr Kieran Sharrock, acting chairman of the general practitioners committee in England, said: “Without investment to do more, practices have to free up resources from elsewhere.

There will be changes coming next month (Getty Images/iStockphoto)

"This hasn’t been properly considered. Ramping up GP workload, and without the support needed, will lead to more GPs leaving the profession.

“Ultimately, it’s our patients who suffer most, and this means more of them will be left waiting longer for the care they desperately need," reports BirminghamLive.

NHS director of primary care Dr Ursula Montgomery said: “GP teams have worked hard to deliver record numbers of appointments with half a million more delivered each week last year compared to pre-pandemic, and this new contract aims to build on this further with more access for patients.

"As well as providing same day care to more than two fifths of patients, GP teams will also step-up preventive action against heart attacks and strokes over the next year.

GPs that cannot offer an appointment must provide people with an assessment there and then (Getty Images/iStockphoto)

"With health professionals encouraged to prescribe statins alongside other preventative measures such as exercise to a much wider number of patients with heart disease, arterial disease and those who suffered a stroke or who have high levels of cholesterol.

"This contract supports GP teams to provide what matters to patients."

Prof Aruna Garcea, primary care chair at the NHS Confederation, said: “Primary care is carrying out 11% more appointments than before the pandemic, which is particularly impressive given their patients tend to present with multiple and more complex needs.”

It comes as total full-time-equivalent GP numbers continue to drop despite growing demand from the ageing population.

Practices have also been told they will need to offer automatic access to future patient records through the NHS app.

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