New models of out-of-hours GP care could reduce A&E attendances in England

4 Dec 2014 02:52 PM

Pressure on over-crowded A&E departments could be reduced if patients requiring out-of-hours urgent care were encouraged to see a GP based in or near the hospital first, according to Monitor.

The regulator believes the NHS may be able to reduce attendances at A&Eand provide better services for patients if it was able to adapt aspects of the model of out-of-hours emergency care used successfully by the public health service in Holland.

This is one of the suggestions from an investigation into how other comparable health systems overseas are meeting the challenge of delivering higher quality care at lower cost.

After studying aspects of healthcare in 7 other countries, Monitor concluded that no other single comparable system offered a way to deliver consistently higher quality care at lower cost than the NHS across the board. The NHS was the least expensive with spending per head per year at $3,659, significantly lower than the average of $6,087 for the countries Monitor studied.

However, the report identified that there are 3 specific service models in use abroad that might be able to offer benefits if used more widely by the NHS:

David Bennett, Chief Executive of Monitor, said:

The NHS is already delivering care in innovative ways but we need continually to be looking for examples of good care at home and abroad, and adopting them as fast as possible.

Implementing new models of care is central to the Five Year Forward View and this report sets out some practical examples of how other health systems are addressing similar challenges.

Professor Terence Stephenson, Chairman of the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges, said yesterday:

The NHS is not alone in facing the challenges of delivering higher quality patient care at lower cost. The NHS is already delivering innovation, but Monitor’s report provides a welcome insight into how other comparable health systems abroad are meeting this challenge.

This is a useful contribution to the wider debate about how the NHS needs to change.

Read the full report: ‘Exploring international acute care models