Drop in face-to-face GP appointments as telephone consultations rise
A move to more telephone and video GP appointments is set to stay - Credit: Getty Images/iStockphoto
The number of Suffolk patients seeing GPs face-to-face has dropped dramatically - as doctors increasingly use digital and telephone methods to assess patients following the coronavirus crisis.
NHS Digital data showed 81% of appointments in Suffolk and north Essex took place face-to-face in January 2020, with just 14% on the phone and 1% on video and online.
By February 2021, the percentage of face-to-face appointments had fallen to 59%, with 36% of appointments now held over the phone. The number of video and online appointments remained fairly similar.
Even though face-to-face appointments are still necessary, health leaders say the change in the nature of consultations will stay.
A spokesman for NHS Ipswich and East Suffolk, NHS West Suffolk and NHS North East Essex clinical commissioning groups, said: “Over the last year of coronavirus, GP practice staff have worked hard to ensure patients have been able access the care and support they need.
You may also want to watch:
“GP practices have always offered telephone consultations, but the increased use of these along with video and online consultations is here to stay.
"Many patients tell us how much more convenient a digital consultation is for them.
Most Read
- 1 Change in pupil premium cut-off date 'cost Suffolk schools £1.1m'
- 2 Missing Stowmarket man, 49, found safe and well
- 3 The 20 places in Suffolk that recorded the most coronavirus cases this week
- 4 Sergeant reveals what's in store for new TV show with Suffolk police team
- 5 Government plans at-home tablet to 'stop the virus in its tracks'
- 6 George Burley: Ipswich fans' dreams would have been shattered by a European Super League
- 7 Woman arrested on suspicion of drink-driving following A14 crash
- 8 Why are 3,500 homes stood empty in Suffolk?
- 9 Jailed in Suffolk: Why these criminals were put behind bars this week
- 10 Measures to tackle Suffolk's 10-year road flooding backlog published
“There will still be times when face-to-face appointments are needed, and they will always be available when indicated so that every patient receives the most appropriate care.”
David Pannell, chief executive of the Suffolk GP Federation, said: "The trend towards a greater mix of phone and video appointments started prior to Covid but was accelerated by the pandemic.
"Across all of the NHS, face-to-face appointments fell in the spring of 2020 but then increased again - but not to the same level as pre-Covid.
"The mix of different appointment methods benefits patients. They are highly effective for many patient needs, are convenient and means patients only need to be seen face to face when this is clinically necessary.
"This is reflected across the NHS with a shift in many hospital outpatient appointments to telephone based consultations."