Softphone app to save NHS up to £20m in GP triage costs
X-on, secures Innovate UK grant for a pioneering app eliminating large proportion of GP call costs from increased remote consultation during COVID-19 pandemic
GPs and patients are to benefit from a new softphone app that will eliminate almost all the ‘hidden cost’ of calls for remote consultations and is forecast to save the NHS as much as £20m over three years.
The app will mean patient calls to their GP are free and, in turn, reduce the cost to GPs and practices for outgoing calls by around 75%.
Its development is aimed at addressing the significant financial impact in primary care of practice-to-patient calls as telephone ‘triage’ has developed as the new consultation model during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The app is being developed by UK cloud telephony and primary care communications specialist, X-on, supported by a significant six-figure grant from the Government’s Innovation Funding Service, part of Innovate UK.
In the last few months, primary care has undergone radical change in its delivery and the way in which GPs and patients make contact with each other
It will be available to GPs and their practices across England, Wales and Scotland from February next year.
Dr Dustyn Saint, a GP partner at the Long Stratton Medical Partnership at Tharston in Norfolk, is one of thousands of doctors who have seen practice bills spiral from the changing nature of doctor-patient consultation.
He said: “We have noticed a big increase in telephone costs between 2019 and 2020 and we’ve needed to purchase many additional lines as the move to telephone as the first point of contact left us with nowhere near enough to manage demand.
“This, and the volumes of calls we are now making, especially to mobiles, have really pushed up costs.”
The software, for use on iPhone or Android smartphones, will plug into existing patient apps to extend patient access and closely integrate with patient clinical record systems, while crucially ensuring data security and confidentiality.
X-on has already established a number of partnerships with app providers for rollout of the softphone app and more are under discussion.
The app is built on a unified digital communications platform that also incorporates traditional telephony as a supporting channel option, and enables a switch to video consultation if necessary.
Under the initiative, patients’ call costs are eliminated when using the app, and, for practice or GP calls to patients, they are significantly reduced through a funding formula principally based on growth forecasts.
The new softphone app will be immediately available to patients of the 700 GP practices that currently have X-on’s key cloud telephony Surgery Connect practice network product or its GP@Home softphone homeworking product.
Our innovation offers a significant answer to the issue, almost completely removing the financial implications for practices as primary care continues to evolve, so that GPs can focus on providing high-quality patient care
Other practices will be able to benefit from cost savings by taking on Surgery Connect or a new embedded “’omnichannel’ communication platform to be launched early next year.
Aside from use as a voice communications channel, the new softphone app will also have versatility to carry notification messages targeted at individual patients which would be normally delivered via SMS, such as flu jab, appointment and prescription information. This will also contribute to cost savings.
Paul Bensley, managing director of X-on, said: “In the last few months, primary care has undergone radical change in its delivery and the way in which GPs and patients make contact with each other, primarily through remote consultation.
“With the increase in telephone calls as a result, one seldom noted impact is the spiralling ‘hidden cost’ to GPs and practices in contacting patients, often when GPs are working from home.
“Our innovation offers a significant answer to the issue, almost completely removing the financial implications for practices as primary care continues to evolve, so that GPs can focus on providing high-quality patient care.
“It offers a sustainable option that supports effective remote consultation and its development, and also ensures that traditional telephony channels remain available and that no patient group is disadvantaged.”