Please be aware that hospitals are as busy as ever, dealing with urgent cases as well as prioritising cancer care. We urge all patients awaiting hospital appointments to be patient and wait to be contacted.
If your appointment is delayed and you desperately need an update, please ring the secretary of the hospital consultant that you are under directly for this information.
We do not have dedicated hotline numbers to the hospital and we are not notified in advance of any hospital appointments or operation dates you might have, therefore if you need this information, we ask that you get in touch with the hospital.
Due to hospital contract changes from April 2017, hospitals are now obliged to respond to any queries you might have about your care, in the same way that we as GP’s respond to patients with queries about the care provided by our practice. Accordingly, hospital matters should not fall to your GP to resolve.
The following is an extract from the NHS Standard Contract, which hospitals must work to, regarding the queries from patients:
12.2 The Provider [hospital] must:
12.2.1 provide Service Users [patients] (in relation to their own care) and Referrers [GP’s] (in relation to the care of an individual Service User) with clear information in respect of each Service about who to contact if they have questions about their care and how to do so;
12.2.2 ensure that there are efficient arrangements in place in respect of each Service for responding promptly and effectively to such questions and that these are publicised to Service Users and Referrers using all appropriate means, including appointment and admission letters and on the Provider’s website; and
12.2.3 wherever possible, deal with such questions from Service Users itself, and not by advising the Service User to speak to their Referrer.
Therefore, please do not accept any comments that you must speak with your GP, as the hospital is contractually obliged to speak with you and answer your queries directly.
Written requests to expedite appointments
We are aware that patients are often told by the hospital to ‘get a letter from the GP’ so that their appointment can be expedited. This is in fact unnecessary and creates an additional administrative burden on already stretched GP services.
As indicated above, hospitals are contractually obliged to communicate directly with patients and respond directly and appropriately to their queries, including specifically questions about appointments. Failure to do so represents a breach of their contract.
Please be aware that waiting a longer time than you want to does not make your request urgent. Unfortunately, in the current situation, everyone is waiting longer*. We cannot write letters to expedite your appointment for this reason.
*Official figures as of March 2024 show that a total of 7.54 million people were waiting to start hospital treatment in England, the highest number since records began.
If, however, your condition is actively deteriorating, we advise you to speak to your specialist so that they can assess if you need to be seen sooner. An initial response might still be ‘get a letter from your GP’, however we are finding that we are merely reporting what you have told us and it seems more sensible for patient and consultant to have a direct conversation. Should you continue to have difficulty in accessing your consultant, we advise that you contact the PALS department of the hospital for advice and assistance via their website.
If you have already called the hospital to update them on your condition and they remain insistent that your GP supply a letter, please download and complete the following letter. You can then bring the letter to the practice so we can forward it on to the hospital on your behalf.
We must stress, however, that getting a quicker appointment is not always guaranteed, and we have no influence on how the hospital is managing and prioritising its own workload.
Open of ‘Patient Initiated Follow-Up’ (PIFU) appointments
If you have an open appointment from the hospital, this usually lasts for 6 months from the date of your last outpatient appointment, unless otherwise specified. If you wish to take up the offer of a further appointment with the hospital, you can do so directly with the consultant’s secretary – you do not have to go via your GP. Simply ring the hospital and ask to be reinstated onto your consultant’s appointment books.
If you are within your open appointment time frame yet you are still told by the hospital to speak to your GP, please request that the hospital reinstate your appointment.