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HomeWeekly RoundupPublic satisfaction with NHS GP services at lowest level in a decade

Public satisfaction with NHS GP services at lowest level in a decade

Public satisfaction with the UK’s National Health Service (NHS) is at its lowest level for a decade, reports The Guardian. Barely half of people surveyed (53%) are happy with how the NHS is run, the lowest percentage since 2007. It is 16 percentage points lower than in 2010, when the coalition government’s austerity programme began. Satisfaction with GP services has fallen to its lowest level. Fewer than two-thirds (63%) of people in Britain are happy with them, while 24% say they are dissatisfied.

The results are based on responses given by about 3,000 adults in England, Scotland and Wales when asked about the NHS and social care. The report says the interviews were carried out between July and October last year. “The findings show the inevitable consequence of starving the NHS of funding for the best part of a decade,” said Niall Dickson, the CEO of the NHS Confederation, which represents NHS organisations. “We should be under no illusion about the scale of the task we face to restore public confidence in the health service.”

Asked why they were dissatisfied with the NHS overall, 53% said: “It takes too long to get a GP or hospital appointment.” A similar proportion (52%) said: “Not enough NHS staff,” while 49% said: “The government doesn’t spend enough money on the NHS.”

However, the report says, the survey also brought good news for the NHS. A record 70% are satisfied with hospital outpatient services. Slightly fewer (63%) are happy with inpatient care, but that is the highest number since 1993.

Quality of NHS care is the main reason people cited for being satisfied with the NHS. In all 71% identified that as a reason, 10 percentage points more than in 2015. The other sources of contentment are that care is free at the point of use (62%) and that there is a good range of services and treatments available (46%).

Professor John Appleby, the chief economist of the Nuffield Trust, said in the report that public satisfaction could improve again over the next few years, as it had done several years after the Labour government increased the NHS budget in the early 2000s.

Professor Helen Stokes-Lampard, the chair of the Royal College of GPs, said: “It’s always disappointing to hear that some people are not always satisfied with the services they are receiving. “General practice is currently facing intense resource and workforce pressures. While GPs are working incredibly hard to combat these, we understand that many patients are still waiting too long to see their doctor – something we find just as frustrating.”

The report says NHS England stressed the positive findings. “For the third year in a row, public satisfaction with the quality of NHS care has improved and satisfaction with inpatient services is now at its highest level since 1993. The results as a whole understandably reflect a health service still under pressure,” said an NHS spokesperson.

[link url="https://www.theguardian.com/society/2019/mar/07/satisfaction-with-nhs-falls-to-lowest-level-for-a-decade"]The Guardian report[/link]

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