DeusXM
Well-Known Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 1
I had an interesting chat with my doctor last week about the number of her patients with diabetes who don't turn up for their appointments - apparently, it's quite a lot of them.
Today, I got my retinopathy appointment letter.
Here is my modest proposal for patient compliance. Instead of putting patients into appointment slots based on just throwing them into the first available slot that shows up on the computer and treating it like a court summons, why not actually get in touch with the patient and ask them when might be a convenient date and time?
My appointment letter feels like a summons - be here on the 1st July at 2pm. Unfortunately, I'm on holiday that day. I suspect when I phone up, I'll be told that now all the slots for a couple of days later are now booked and the earliest will be something like October. Yet I bet every single one of those now-booked slots are 'booked' purely by the computer system with no actual relationship to a patient's ability to attend, and if I'd been called a few days ago when all this was being planned, doubtless we could have found a mutually convenient date in a quicker time.
Seriously, this isn't rocket science. Why can't the NHS manage something as basic as arranging appointments in conjunction with their patients? And they wonder why so few people show up...
Today, I got my retinopathy appointment letter.
Here is my modest proposal for patient compliance. Instead of putting patients into appointment slots based on just throwing them into the first available slot that shows up on the computer and treating it like a court summons, why not actually get in touch with the patient and ask them when might be a convenient date and time?
My appointment letter feels like a summons - be here on the 1st July at 2pm. Unfortunately, I'm on holiday that day. I suspect when I phone up, I'll be told that now all the slots for a couple of days later are now booked and the earliest will be something like October. Yet I bet every single one of those now-booked slots are 'booked' purely by the computer system with no actual relationship to a patient's ability to attend, and if I'd been called a few days ago when all this was being planned, doubtless we could have found a mutually convenient date in a quicker time.
Seriously, this isn't rocket science. Why can't the NHS manage something as basic as arranging appointments in conjunction with their patients? And they wonder why so few people show up...