28 Jul 2014

One in nine people cannot get a GP appointment

More than 10 per cent of people who to see a GP cannot get an appointment, with doctors turning away their patients more than 40 million times this year, according to new figures.

Lack of investment is leading to an overstretched service in crisis which is struggling to meet patient demand, the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) has said.

Considering current trends in cities across the country where patients have complained about finding it difficult to get an appointment, the RCGP has forecast figures suggesting the situation will only get worse.

The body, made up of more than 49,000 family doctors, said a recent patient survey showed worrying trends and called for 8,000 more GPs to help deal with the shortfall.

In London the number of times patients are unable to speak to or see a GP or nurse is expected to rise from 9.3 million this year to 10.4 million next year.

Similar increases will be seen in areas including Birmingham, Greater Manchester, West Yorkshire and Merseyside, with this year’s figures predicted to rise by hundreds of thousands.

Situation reached ‘crisis point’

The figures confirm the fallout from having family doctors and practice nurses conduct 90 per cent of appointments for just 8.5 per cent of the NHS budget in England, the RCGP said, calling for investment to be increased to 11 per cent.

RCGP honorary treasurer Dr Helen Stokes-Lampard said the situation has reached crisis point.

“The fact that patients in England will be unable to see their GP when they want to on more than 50 million occasions in 2015 is a truly shocking indictment of the crisis that is enveloping general practice,” she said.

“No GP wants to turn away a single patient – but surgeries are being faced with no choice because they don’t have the resources to cope with the increasing number of older people who need complex care, whilst also meeting the needs of families and people of working age.

“The profession has been brought to its knees both by a chronic slump in investment and the fact that there are now simply not enough family doctors to go around.”

Dr Stokes-Lampard said there is a concern patients who are unable to get an appointment may give up trying.

“Whilst some of these patients will try calling the practice another time to get an appointment, this isn’t good enough – many will either ending up in hospital or, worse still, will not seek medical treatment at all.

“The government must urgently move to increase investment in general practice to 11 per cent of the NHS budget by 2017 – and recruit 8,000 family doctors.”

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