Abstract

BackgroundMissed appointments are common in primary care, contributing to reduced clinical capacity. NHS England has estimated that there are 7.2 million missed general practice appointments annually, at a cost of £216 million. Reducing these numbers is important for an efficient primary care sector.AimTo evaluate the impact of a system-wide quality improvement (QI) programme on the rates of missed GP appointments, and to identify effective practice interventions.Design and settingPractices within a clinical commissioning group (CCG) in East London, with an ethnically diverse and socially deprived population.MethodStudy practices engaged in a generic QI programme, which included sharing data on appointment systems and Did Not Attend (DNA) rates. Fourteen out of 25 practices implemented DNA reduction projects, supported by practice-based coaching. Appointment data were collected from practice electronic health records. Evaluation included comparisons of DNA rates pre- and post-intervention using interrupted times series analysis.ResultsIn total, 25 out of 32 practices engaged with the programme. The mean DNA rate at baseline was 7% (range 2–12%); 2 years later the generic intervention DNA rates were 5.2%. This equates to a reduction of 4030 missed appointments. The most effective practice intervention was to reduce the forward booking time to 1 day. The practice that made this change reduced its mean DNA rate from 7.8% to 3.9%.ConclusionForward booking time in days is the best predictor of practice DNA rates. Sharing appointment data produced a significant reduction in missed appointments, and behaviour change interventions with patients had a modest additional impact; in contrast, introducing structural change to the appointment system effectively reduced DNA rates. To reduce non-attendance, it appears that the appointment system needs to change, not the patient.

Highlights

  • Non-attendance for appointments is a problem that is widely experienced across healthcare settings

  • Forward booking time in days is the best predictor of practice Did Not Attends (DNAs) rates

  • Sharing appointment data produced a significant reduction in missed appointments, and behaviour change interventions with patients had a modest additional impact; in contrast, introducing structural change to the appointment system effectively reduced DNA rates

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Summary

Introduction

Non-attendance for appointments is a problem that is widely experienced across healthcare settings. Did Not Attends (DNAs) result in wasted appointments, reduced clinical capacity, and inequality of access to health care.[1] NHS England reports that ‘missed GP appointments cost millions’, calculating that 5% — more than 15 million — of appointments in primary care are missed every year, of which 7.2 million are booked GP appointments.[2] This equates to 1.2 million GP hours, with estimated NHS costs of £216 million annually To address these costs, NHS England exhorts patients to ‘cancel appointments, rather than just not show up’.2. Reducing these numbers is important for an efficient primary care sector

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