Warning over ‘drastic’ changes to GP appointments with over half of consultations to move online 

Will coronavirus mean you never see a doctor face-to-face again? Warning over ‘drastic’ changes to GP appointments with over half of consultations set to move online

  • Professor Martin Marshall told MPs of a large uptake in virtual consultations
  • He said that at least 50 per cent of all GP appointments could move online
  • Virtual appointments will not be suitable for all patients as each case is different
  • Here’s how to help people impacted by Covid-19

A health expert has warned that as many as 50 per cent of GP appointments could be moved online even after the coronavirus pandemic.

Chairman of the Royal College of GPs Professor Martin Marshall told the Commons Health and Social Care Committee there had been a large uptake in virtual consultations due to Covid-19.

This is partly because doctors now have access to more modern technology.   

He told MPs: ‘There’s going to be a dramatic change.

Professor Martin Marshall, chairman of the Royal College of GPs has warned that around half of GP consultations could move online following the coronavirus pandemic

‘So, prior to the pandemic, about 70% of consultations in general practice were carried out face to face.

‘Now, according to the data, it’s about 23%, I suspect it might even be less than that.

‘That’s been enabled, of course, because it had to be, that was the reality of not being able to provide face-to-face care except when it’s exceptionally required.

‘Most importantly, it’s been enabled by having access to the technology and the investment that’s been put into the technology.

‘I think the future will be somewhere between where we were and where we are. I don’t think that 70% of consultations have to be carried out face to face before the crisis and I don’t think 20% to 23% is right either.’

Professor Marshall said virtual consultations would not be suitable for ‘problems that require relationships, that require you to understand, to be able to lay on hands, to be able to use your sixth sense to see non-verbal communications, all of the things that are really the essence of general practice’.

Prof Marshall said support would be needed to set up the equipment and train GPs in addition to providing the kit.

He added: ‘It’s a small investment that’s required, which could have a massive impact on our ability to provide a different kind of care for those who will benefit from it.’

Professor Marshall also said that virtual consultations would not be suitable for every patient where a relationship with the GP is vital (stock image)

Professor Marshall also said that virtual consultations would not be suitable for every patient where a relationship with the GP is vital (stock image)

MPs were also told about a reduction in diagnoses of dementia due to the closure of memory clinics.

‘That is a very real concern, and of course it’s relevant to mention, but it’s relevant to many other conditions that we’re looking after, and particularly in the early days of the crisis a lot of services that we wanted to refer to had shut down,’ he said.

‘Progressively they’re opening up and that’s getting easier for us, I think.

‘Dementia services, by and large, are still quite difficult, they’re not being regarded as a priority however important they are to the patients we are serving.’