Tuesday 4 March 2014

Difficult times….

No Blog entries for months - has he lost interest, faith, his password or retired?

Well sometimes when things go quiet it is because lots is happening, and sometimes there is just so much confusion no-one has a clue what is going on.

In the front-line world of General Practice the 'demand' for service continues to increase at a frightening rate. EVERYONE is queueing up to land more work at the door, mailbox or 'e-inbox' of General practice. These are daunting, fraught and dangerous times, with no clear end in sight.

The press remains schizophrenic in attitude to NHS services, on one hand 'blasting' the publicised high profile failings, then on the other hand fiercely defending a National Treasure. Clearly part of the long run up to a General Election next year where Health will be a political battle ground.

So what is happening in a 'real' GP surgery, trying to find solutions on a daily basis and deliver a sustainable service? Well we have far too much on to spend any meaningful time to develop on-line services. Even basic transaction support becomes questionable when we have no spare capacity, so harsh but practical decision are made to support any service we feel helps capacity and safety, but to abandon those who do not seem to us to help or at least prove resource neutral.
Our decision:
Transactions actively supported for online medication requesting and appointment reminders
Transactions retained for appointment booking and cancellation
No active support (or withdrawal) for patient access to records

If we are in the vanguard of 'early adopters' for Record Access, what does this type of decision indicate for other practices? Well, we suspect that few will actively promote online activity that costs time, effort and money. We are well aware of the claims and reports by 'enthusiasts' over efficiency to the business, but we have NO capacity or resource to get that far - even if we believed these claims were realisable outside enthusiast practices. Transactions for appointment booking seem to have little value to patients giving 24/7 access when we have 10 days to wait for a free appointment! SO the point is that online interaction we currently have does not add to capacity, and some fear it may fuel unrealistic expectation.

For those who are sceptical of the claims from General Practice I can only report my real-world experience of the last Friday and Monday in GP land. Both were days 'on-call', triaging and seeing those with perceived urgent problems (medical, surgical, dental, social, financial, administrative etc etc), both lasted from 8am to beyond 7pm. No coffee breaks or lunch, and an intense run of 'decision taking' and 'risk assessing'. Having been 'dusted' around by cleaners on Monday evening at 7:20 pm I gave up, to complete paperwork the following day in the early morning before 'work'. Not sustainable or safe.

So the new GP contract from april 2014 promises to incentivise/require GP practices to interact in more modern online ways. But as a service we are close to breaking point in a way none of us long serving providers have seen before. If GP service collapses so does the rest of the NHS. Forcing Online interaction will not be the final straw, but perhaps there are other greater priorities?

Difficult times…..

No comments:

Post a Comment