Patients Association welcomes restoration of in-person GP appointments

17 May 2021 01:32 PM

The Patients Association has warmly welcomed the new requirements on GP practices to offer face to face appointments to patients who want them.

Rachel Power, Chief Executive of the Patients Association, said: “Patients have made clear how difficult they have been finding access to GP services, and that most commonly they clearly prefer to see their GP in person. We called for the restoration of in-person appointments as the default option when we published our second Pandemic Patient Experience report, which showed starkly how patients have been struggling to access primary care in a way that meets their needs.

“It will be a great relief to many patients to know that their GP should now unquestionably be offering face to face appointments. We saw how media reports of our findings clearly resonated with patients and arose strong feelings. We hope that many patients will now be able to rebuild their relationships with their GPs and benefit from the assurance that will bring them.”

The NHS’s new instructions to GPs require them to make, “a clear offer of appointments in person,” and, “respect preferences for face to face care unless there are good reasons to the contrary.” The instruction to identify patients’ preferences is clear: remote consultations will still be available for those who prefer them, but the letter to GPs observes that some patients have struggled to use new forms of access.

GPs will still be allowed to arrange a remote appointment in the first instance, if the patient reports having COVID symptoms.

Rachel Power added: “We now look to general practice to make this a reality. We recognise that GPs are very busy, and that this will be demanding for them. But patients are counting on them to rise to the challenge: it is not acceptable for NHS services to be setting up systems that work for them but not for patients.”

Our Pandemic Patient Experience II report is based on a survey of predominantly older patients with long term conditions, and key findings include: