Why the GP Patient Survey matters
Dr Julie Sharman, Medical Director with our GP and Practice Support Team, explains why practices should care about the GP Patient Survey and what actions they should take to follow-up on it.
By this point you may have forgotten about the annual Ipsos-Mori GP Patient Survey. After all, the data was collected between January and March, but the results weren’t released until last month. Or perhaps you haven’t forgotten, but you may have dismissed the survey as unfair and irrelevant. Regardless of your feelings about the survey, it is important and how you act on your practice’s survey results does impact on your CQC evaluation and several other “Quality” assessments. And if you are a PMS practice, under the service line “Patient Voice” there will be a contractual requirement for you to improve on your results for specific survey questions. Now is the time to look into your results and make a plan for managing them.
First, let’s do a quick overview of the GP Patient Survey: the survey is sent to over a million people across the UK by an independent research agency. The point of the survey is to give patients the opportunity to feedback about their experiences with local NHS services and for individual GP practices to see how they stack up against similar practices. We know that London consistently has the lowest-ranked patient satisfaction across England. There are likely many reasons for this, and it does not include London GPs being inadequate. Don’t be disheartened if some of the responses are less positive than you anticipate, we all know that it is the patients who have a complaint that are likely those who spend time completing feedback like this.
Follow these suggestions to successfully assess and improve on your GP Patient Survey results.
Suggestions:
- First things first, go to the GP Patient Survey website and check your practice’s results: https://gp-patient.co.uk/practices-search
- Spend some time looking at what your practice could improve on, and how it compares to the CCG average and the national average and last year’s results. It is well-worth celebrating the items that your practice has performed well on, to maintain the morale of your busy staff.
- Check what Patient Voice indicators are in your PMS contract, and focus on making an action plan for those.
- Next, get your Patient Participation Group involved. Patient engagement is integral to high quality care, and this group is likely to have both innovative ideas for improving problems, and the time and motivation to raise awareness in the community. See our patient engagement document for more details.
- Start working on this plan sooner rather than later. Remember, the survey results were released after significant lag time, meaning that you only have approximately 6 months, rather than a year to make these improvements.
As ever, if you are feeling stuck and would like some support, get in touch with our GP and Practice Support team by emailing GPSupport@lmc.org.uk. You can also contact your individual sector team; the details of Committee Liaison Executives can be found here.
Last updated : 20 Sep 2017Responding to online comments about your practice (13 Apr 2018)
This is a reminder for practices about what they can do if they receive notification of negative comments posted on the NHS Choices website. We understand practices are notified...Recommended codes for vaccinations (12 Apr 2018)
Childhood vaccination coding can be unexpectedly complex there are just 26 pre-school and school age vaccinations, but practices can record these vaccinations using over 1,000 different codes. Data export providers,...LEAD events May and June 2018 (12 Apr 2018)
Hold the date: our annual Practice Manager Conference will take place on Thursday 22 November 2018 at Woburn House Conference Centre. The following events are now available for online booking....Stand. Vote. Engage. The 2018 LMC elections (12 Apr 2018)
Nomination papers for this year’s LMC elections were sent out in the week beginning 30 April 2018. This year every LMC seat is up for election. We want any GP...Concerns about coroners issues (21 Mar 2018)
In response to concerns raised regarding GP relationships with the coroners’ office, we recently requested examples of problems experienced by GPs and practice staff. Examples provided so far include: ...Londonwide LMCs' March 2018 newsletter (21 Mar 2018)
GMC requests for evidence of English language competence (20 Mar 2018)
The House of Commons Library has release updated guidance on what documentation the GMC will accept as evidence that GPs, nurses and pharmacists have sufficient English language skills. These controls...LMC elections – join us in May to learn about what is involved in being an LMC member (20 Mar 2018)
This year every LMC seat is up for election and next month you will have a chance to stand for election to your LMC. Any GP working in one of...NHS Digital questioned on Home Office data sharing (20 Mar 2018)
On Thursday 15 March the Health and Social Care Select Committee took evidence from Sarah Wilkinson, Chief Executive Officer, NHS Digital; and Noel Gordon, Chair, NHS Digital on data sharing. ...UK LMC Conference 2018 round-up (20 Mar 2018)
This year's LMC Conference saw debate on a range of issues of concern to London GPs: from Bawa-Garbar and the use of written reflections, to mass resignations, workload management, and...Guidance
We provide expert guidance for practices in our guidance section, as well as an archive of other materials you may find useful.
GP Support
Contact our GP Support team if you need help or advice.
The team provide professional and pastoral support to GPs and practice teams on a broad range of issues.