The changing face of missed appointments

Patients failing to attend general practice appointments has substantial time and cost implications for health care. In 2019, approximately 7.2 million GP appointments were missed annually in England, costing the NHS around £216 million. Missed primary care appointments add to the already over-stret...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:British journal of general practice Vol. 73; no. 728; pp. 134 - 135
Main Authors: Parsons, Jo, Abel, Gary, Mounce, Luke Ta, Atherton, Helen
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: England Royal College of General Practitioners 01-03-2023
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Summary:Patients failing to attend general practice appointments has substantial time and cost implications for health care. In 2019, approximately 7.2 million GP appointments were missed annually in England, costing the NHS around £216 million. Missed primary care appointments add to the already over-stretched capacity of GPs and healthcare professionals. In addition to this, patients failing to attend appointments potentially leaves already vulnerable patients living with unmet need, and delays appropriate treatment and diagnoses, adding to longer or more severe conditions with increased cost to the NHS. A review of studies from five countries found a mean of 15.2% of booked primary care appointments were missed in recent years. Patients of non-white or minority ethnicity, low sociodemographic status, younger age, or with mental health or multiple physical health conditions were more likely to miss appointments. Common reasons for missing general practice appointments included work or family commitments, forgetting the appointment, difficulties with transportation to get to the appointment, and appointments not being with a preferred GP.
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ISSN:0960-1643
1478-5242
DOI:10.3399/bjgp23X732249