- 25 July 2019
- 4 min read
Virtual GP service ‘risks destabilising care for patients with greatest needs’
SubscribeThe app offers a symptom check for patients and video GP consultations within hours, but has been accused of ‘cherry-picking’ healthy patients.

Virtual GP 'destabilises care'
Expansion of a virtual GP service where patients are consulted over smartphones risks “destabilising care” for the most complex and vulnerable cases, a heath professor warned.
If rolled out more widely, the NHS GP at Hand service would “cream off” fit young patients from existing practices at the expense of those with the greatest needs, said Martin Rowland, emeritus professor of health services research at the University of Cambridge.
System 'cherry picks best patients'
Millions of NHS patients in London and Birmingham can sign up to the service, which offers a GP consultation via a smartphone 24 hours a day.
If a patient needs a face-to-face appointment, they must travel to clinics.
The app offers a symptom check for patients and video GP consultations within hours, but has been accused of “cherry-picking” healthy patients.
More than 50,000 people have enrolled at the service, created by private health provider Babylon.
An independent evaluation by Ipsos MORI found that patients using the service were younger than the average NHS GP patient in London, with just 0.1% of patients being cared for by its “chronic care team”.
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