GP satisfaction drops in west Sussex

Satisfaction with GP services in west Sussex has dropped, new figures show.
File photo dated 10/09/14 of a GP checking a patient's blood pressure. The current NHS system for seeking care "is not fit for purpose", according to a review, which recommends new neighbourhood teams to improve access for patients. Issue date: Thursday May 26, 2022.File photo dated 10/09/14 of a GP checking a patient's blood pressure. The current NHS system for seeking care "is not fit for purpose", according to a review, which recommends new neighbourhood teams to improve access for patients. Issue date: Thursday May 26, 2022.
File photo dated 10/09/14 of a GP checking a patient's blood pressure. The current NHS system for seeking care "is not fit for purpose", according to a review, which recommends new neighbourhood teams to improve access for patients. Issue date: Thursday May 26, 2022.

Satisfaction with GP services in west Sussex has dropped, new figures show.

Each spring, NHS England and market research company Ipsos Mori survey patients across England on how they feel about their local GP services.

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Between January and April more than 700,000 people responded – including 10,570 patients in the NHS West Sussex CCG area.

The results show 75.8% of people in the area would describe their GP experience as ‘good’ – down from 86% in spring 2021, and also worse than in 2020.

The survey further found that 30% of people with long-term health conditions do not feel they have had enough support from local services – up from 23.2% last year.

Beccy Baird, senior fellow at independent think tank the King’s Fund, said: “For many of us, general practice is the front door to the NHS – these results show that patients are finding that door increasingly hard to push open.

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“GPs are working harder than ever before, yet these findings show a dramatic fall in patients’ experience of getting an appointment.

“Many of the challenges patients face accessing their GP stem from the chronic staff shortages that have plagued services for years.

“Practices can’t recruit enough GPs, nurses or other professionals to meet the rising levels of need, because in many cases those staff simply don’t exist."

The results also show 18.7% of respondents in west Sussex had avoided booking a necessary GP appointment because they did not want to burden the NHS, and 8.4% because they did not want to risk catching Covid-19.

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Professor Martin Marshall, chairman of the Royal College of GPs, a membership body for the profession, said: “These findings reflect an over-stretched service, with GPs and our teams doing our best for patients under intense workload and workforce pressures.

“Ultimately, GPs, our teams and patients want the same thing – access to high quality and timely care – and we share patients’ frustrations when this can’t be delivered,” he added.

Across England, satisfaction was at its lowest level on record, with 72% of respondents describing their overall experience as ‘good’ – down from 83% last year.

The survey results were weighted and rebalanced to account for differences in age, gender, and other demographic factors between areas.

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An NHS spokeswoman said the NHS is “determined to make it easier to get an appointment, which is why the health service has invested record amounts in primary care, including offering a new telephone service which increases the number of phone lines practices have for patients".

She said practices are open and encouraged people to come forward with any worrying symptoms or health issues.