Dear Sir,
I read your article on the "no-show patients" in Bromsgrove and agree it's a terrible waste of resources. Especially in this day and age of technology.
I then started to think about my doctors now and in the past. I am a 61-year-old male who doesn't go to the doctors very often.
When I was a child if we needed to see a doctor we used to turn up at the surgery unannounced and wait our turn.
Now you phone the surgery for an appointment and are told it's a 7-10 day wait but if you phone in the morning at 8.30am you may get a cancellation.
What chances are there of somebody cancelling that have not already cancelled between a late afternoon phone call and 8.30am?
People will take that 7-10 day wait just in case, then either recover from their ailments and not bother to cancel or do they get a cancellation booking and the surgery forget to delete the original appointment?
This then asks the question, why a 7-10 day wait when in the 60s and 70s we were seen on the same day?
My first thought was 'not enough doctors for the population'.
I checked on https://www.bmj.com/content/357/bmj.j2940 which shows that in 1960 we had 0.85 doctors per 1000 population, in 2015 2.8 doctors/1000. That is an cumulative increase of 307%.
This figure is for doctors and not GPs but I thought there may be a similar comparison.
There are probably reasons that I haven't taken into consideration but it brings reason to thought.
Regards
Alan Hodson
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