Patients struggling for GP appointments think âtheyâre all out playing golfâ
Surreyâs GPs accused of running "a failing systemâ where âitâs impossible to see a GPâ.
Surreyâs GPs have been criticised by a councillor who says they are âdesigning a failing systemâ where âitâs impossible to see a GPâ and people think they are âare out there playing golfâ.
Patientsâ struggles to access their doctor have been heard, Surrey County Councilâs adults and health select committee was told today (March 3), and the system is continuing to evolve as research shows it is not working well a lot of the time.
A Surrey GP told councillors they are âworking all day, trying to serve as many patients as possible.â
A new cloud telephone system will be delivered across the whole Surrey Heartlands area, though this will take at least a year.
Cllr Ernest Mallett (Residentsâ Association and Independent, West Molesey) said: âThe simple fact is that you are running a system at the moment where none of us can see a GP.
âIf I waved your report in front of any of my residents they would just say thatâs a load of nonsense and theyâd be infuriated.
âYouâre talking about doing cloud services, well youâre all in the cloud thatâs the trouble, where are you, where are the GPs today?
âThe common view is that the GPs are out there playing golf, because none of us can see them.â
Under a new digital system accelerated by the pandemic, consultations by phone or video are considered by a practice to be a better alternative than face-to-face in some cases.
Clare Burgess, chief executive of Surrey Coalition of Disabled People, told how John (not his real name) from northwest Surrey, who has an ear infection and is completely blind, âhadnât been able to get hold of his GP so over the weekend he crossed three main roads to deliver a handwritten noteâ.
She said: âHe hadnât had a response so got in touch with me. I jumped online and the GP practice said because weâve given out all our appointments today, you canât even send us a message.â
Dr Charlotte Canniff, a Sunbury GP and clinical chair of Surrey Heartlands clinical commissioning group, said: âI cannot defend the experience that John just went through, itâs not acceptable and itâs not what Iâd want any patient in Surrey to have to go through.
âWeâre just about aware of the capacity that hits our front door. I think thatâs the tip of an iceberg and what weâre not aware of is the capacity that never even gets to our front door.
âI would like to really stress there is no practice in Surrey that is playing golf, that is not working all day, trying to serve as many patients as possible.â
She later joked she had a âtee-off timeâ before clarifying she was due in surgery.
Councillors were told 3.16 of over 6.5 million Surrey Heartlands patient consultations in a year were conducted face-to-face.
In January 2022, 237,522 appointments (61.4 per cent) were delivered in person and 149,144 (38.6 our cent) were virtual.
Dr Canniff added: âItâs changed in some ways for the better, itâs opened up additional channels. Many people like not having to leave work, sort out childcare or a taxi.
âWeâve also been told loud and clear, and agree loud and clear, that there are some conditions and some patients with certain preferences that are better dealt with face-to-face.
âAs we design the offer going forward we are very mindful that we need to be flexible around the types of access.â
âThere is a lot of pressure on the systemâ
Director of primary care Nikki Mallender said: âSurrey Heartlands is the first integrated care system as I understand it, certainly in the region if not nationally, to start re-engaging with our community about the co-design of our services, so we are trying to respond â itâs just that there is a lot of pressure in the system.
âAlongside of that delivery weâve had a very intensive delivery of the vaccine service, of which general practice I think delivered 80 per cent â if you think about 1.1 million population and the three doses it took to deliver, the GPs certainly havenât been sitting on their laurels, thereâs been a lot of work going on.â
Dr Canniff said they were âstill battling with a lack of availability of appointmentsâ and had âhad significant issues recruiting for at least the last five years and itâs getting progressively worseâ.
Surrey Heartlands has 530 full-time equivalent GPs, each offering eight half-days of consultations a week and each serving around 2,500 people.
Dr Pramit Patel, Surrey Heartlands primary care network lead, said that to have a net gain of GPs âwhen weâve got quite a few of our working GPs in the final years of their working career â we are going to have a sort of fall off the cliff position.â
Select committee chair Councillor Bernie Muir (Con, Epsom West) asked: âWhat is an acceptable length of time for someone to be hanging on the phone before they are answered⌠having to listen to the interminable music?â
She was told Surrey Heartlands had just received enough money from NHS England to upgrade to a cloud telephone system in every one of their 104 practices. This would take at least a year.
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