Quarter of GPs offer Patient Access

  • 5 September 2013
Quarter of GPs offer Patient Access

A quarter of GPs in England are now actively using Emis’ Patient Access, which can be used to give patients access to their records and transactional services such as online booking.

Emis said more than 385,000 patients are now using the service. This is a rise of 40% over the past year.

Many more practices are using the booking and repeat prescription functionality than the access to records functionality.

Take up for this has been very low so far, despite repeated government pledges to provide access for all patients who want it by 2015, and new financial incentives for doing so.

Emis managing director Neil Laycock told EHI there are some “hotspots” where GPs are offering patients access to their records, but “it’s very much about whether people switch it on or not and thus far in the journey people are looking more for transactional services."

Emis said the boost in Patient Access registration has been helped by the launch of a Patient Access app, which has had nearly 30,000 downloads since March.

Dr Anant Sharma, a partner at Bilston Health Centre in Wolverhampton said: “We make 100% of our appointments available each day for online booking. It saves on trips to the surgery to request and pick up repeat prescriptions.

“Patients can also securely message the practice with non-urgent queries and requests, avoiding phone calls or a GP appointment. Age is no barrier. Our oldest Patient Access user is 91.”

In Sheffield, more than a third of appointments with the Sheffield University Health Service are booked through Patient Access. Fifty per cent of patients who use the diabetic clinic book their appointments online.

Ben Hallsworth, Sheffield’s medical records summariser, said Patient Access is a popular service.

“As well as benefitting the patients in terms of convenience, it saves our reception staff considerable time – it takes pressure off them and the phone lines during the busy early morning period and allows them to spend more time helping patients who have more in-depth enquiries,” he said.

 

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