NHS app overhaul to give patients more choice in bid to cut waiting times

In a bid to reduce NHS waiting times the government is laying out plans to upgrade the NHS app bringing the health service into the digital age as ITV News' Ian Woods explains


The NHS App will be overhauled to give NHS patients who need elective care more choice to decide where they are treated under new government plans to slash waiting lists.

Health Secretary Wes Streeting said the move will shift the NHS "into the digital age" and help cut waiting times "from 18 months to 18 weeks."

Action will also be taken to tackle missed appointments, which can be costly for the health service.

Experts welcomed the move, but warned that digital innovations must not "create new barriers" and "come at the expense of excluding those without a smartphone."

At the moment, the NHS App can be used for the likes of booking and managing appointments, viewing health records and ordering repeat prescriptions.

The upgraded platform will allow patients who need non-emergency elective treatment to choose from a range of providers, including those in the independent sector.

Users will also be able to view and manage appointments, book tests and checks at convenient locations such as community diagnostic centres, receive test results, and book any necessary follow-up appointments, such as remote consultations or surgery.

According to the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC), fewer than a quarter of patients are offered a choice of hospital to have treatment.

Mr Streeting said: “If the wealthy can choose where and when they are treated, then working class patients should be able to as well, and this government will give them that choice.

Health Secretary Wes Streeting said the Government will give patients a choice Credit: Ben Whitley/PA

“Our plan will reform the NHS, so patients are fully informed every step of the way through their care, they are given proper choice to go to a different provider for a shorter wait, and put in control of their own healthcare.”

The first step of the plan will come into force in March when patients at more than 85% of acute trusts will be able to view their appointments on the NHS App.

They will also be able to contact their healthcare provider and receive regular updates, including how long they are likely to wait.

The elective reform plan will also establish minimum standards for patients to give them more power over decision-making.

This includes giving people a choice on how their care is followed up, be it in person or online, as well as giving patients a shortlist of providers to choose from and making it easier for them to contact providers for follow-ups.

Officials claim there were eight million missed appointments in 2023-24, with measures also being put in place to tackle the issue.

Improving two-way communication between patients and clinicians, as well as using artificial intelligence (AI), could save an additional one million missed appointments, the DHSC estimates.

Work is underway to pilot AI services that pinpoint patients who are likely to miss an appointment so that extra support, such as free transport, can be offered.

Mr Streeting added: “This Government’s reform agenda will take the NHS from a one size fits all, top down, like it or lump it service, to a modern service that puts patients in the driving seat and treats them on time – delivering on our plan for change to drive a decade of national renewal.

“By bringing our analogue NHS into the digital age, we will cut waiting times from 18 months to 18 weeks and give working class patients the same choice, control, and convenience as the wealthy receive.”

Last month, it emerged that the waiting list for routine hospital treatment had fallen to its lowest level for seven months.

Figures published by NHS England in December showed an estimated 7.54 million treatments were waiting to be carried out at the end of October, down from 7.57 million at the end of September and the lowest figure since March 2024.

The number of patients waiting for treatments was unchanged month-on-month, at 6.34 million.


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The chairman of the British Medical Association (BMA) council said the app upgrade “won’t make serious inroads into waiting lists without significant improvements to other parts of our healthcare system”.

Professor Phil Banfield said the overhaul “may help some patients navigate disjointed and complex pathways of care”, but it “must not discriminate or alienate those patients who cannot use or do not have access to digital technology”.

The Conservatives said Labour had delivered only “partial announcements” for NHS reform.

“The Conservatives laid the foundations for increased patient choice, launching and revolutionising the NHS App to help transform services, treatments, and access for patients, so it is positive to see Labour building on our solid foundations,” shadow health and social care secretary Ed Argar said.

“We will work with the Government to support reform across our public services when they bring forward a clear and comprehensive plan, but sadly so far all Labour have delivered are partial announcements, and yet further reviews and consultations despite having 14 years in opposition to work out what they actually wanted to do.

“Labour promised reform – now patients are clear, it’s time they actually delivered it.”


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