
NHS app to become default source for appointments, screenings and test results
The £50 million investment will see 270 million messages sent through the NHS app this year, an increase of 70 million on the previous financial year.
Push notifications will provide appointment reminders to patients to try to reduce the risk of no attendance, with around eight million missed appointments in elective care missed in 2023/24.
📱 Do you have your NHS App notifications on?
📩 To help patients, over 160 million messages were sent via the NHS App in the last year.
✅ Turn notifications on to get the most out of your NHS App.
Learn more: https://t.co/yLdDutSNa5 pic.twitter.com/BQbnRhv92B
— Department of Health and Social Care (@DHSCgovuk) June 7, 2025
More than 11 million people in the UK currently log into the NHS app every month, while almost 20 million are opted in to receive healthcare messages from the app.
Where app messaging is not available, particularly for elderly patients without smartphones, communications will be sent via text message and then by letter as a last resort and phone lines will be freed up.
It is hoped the changes will give patients better access to manage their healthcare journey and make informed decisions about their care.
NHS app services, which were launched in December 2018, are now used in 87% of hospitals across England.
Last month, NHS England announced millions of patients would be able to get 'Amazon-style' tracking updates on their prescriptions through the app, to check if their medicines are ready to collect or have been despatched for delivery.
Health Secretary Wes Streeting says modernising the NHS can save money that can be reinvested in the front line (PA)
Health Secretary Wes Streeting said: 'People are living increasingly busy lives and want to access information about their health at the touch of a button, rather than having to wait weeks for letters that often arrive too late.
'This Government is bringing our analogue health service into the digital age, so that being a patient in the NHS is as convenient as online banking or ordering a takeaway.
'The NHS still spends hundreds of millions of pounds on stamps, printing, and envelopes. By modernising the health service, we can free up huge amounts of funding to reinvest in the front line.
'Through the investment and reform in our Plan for Change, we will make the NHS App the front door to the health service and put power in the hands of patients.'
Rachel Power, chief executive of the Patient's Association, said: 'This major upgrade to the NHS App marks a significant step in modernising how patients receive information, from test results to screening invitations.
'This was a recommendation from our Digital Coalition and realises changes that patients have asked for.
'We welcome this investment and the ambition behind it. Success for any digital innovation will be the implementation of the Digital Inclusion Plan and working directly with patients and communities.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
20 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Desperate Keir Starmer tries to stabilise Labour by vowing to make NHS a six-day service… but what happens if you get sick on Sunday?
Sir Keir Starmer is attempting to stablilise his rocky Labour administration by launching a new 10-year plan for the NHS. In what has swiftly become the PM's worst week in office so far - after he was forced to shelve key welfare reforms - Sir Keir will outline a major health shake-up. The Government is promising to deliver 'a brand-new era for the NHS' and 'one of the most seismic shifts in care in the history of the health service'. The '10 Year Health Plan' includes plans for the creation of a 'neighbourhood health service' to ease the strain on hospitals. New neighbourhood health services will be rolled out across the country to bring tests, post-op care, nursing and mental health teams closer to people's homes. The aim is to give people access to a full range of services, leaving hospitals to focus on the sickest, with neighbourhood health centres opening at evenings and weekends. Labour is promising new health centres to house the neighbourhood teams, which will eventually be open 12 hours a day, six days a week within local communities. But the plans appear to be less ambitious than pledges by previous governments to make the NHS a seven-day service, which were left unmet. Jeremy Hunt, the former Tory health secretary, saw doctors begin the first all-out strike in NHS history in 2016 as he tried to introduce a seven-day health service. Ex-Labour PM Gordon Brown also promised new health centres that would open seven days a week for 12 hours a day, but saw his plans resisted by unions. Sir Keir will use a major speech on Thursday to unveil his vision for the NHS, as he seeks to shift focus away from several chaotic days in Westminster. This saw him U-turn on welfare cuts amid the threat of a major revolt by Labour MPs, as well as scenes of Chancellor Rachel Reeves crying in the House of Commons. Writing for broadcaster LBC ahead of the speech, the PM said the Government is now moving to its 'next phase'. 'A major programme of renewal and rebuilding that will transform the entire country,' he added. 'Once again making Britain a nation where you work hard and reap the rewards. A Britain you feel proud to live in once again.' The new health plan sets out how the NHS will move from analogue to digital, treatment to prevention, and from hospital to more community care. The 'status quo of hospital by default will end', according to the Government, with care shifted into neighbourhoods and people's homes. By 2035, the intention is that the majority of outpatient care will happen outside of hospitals, with less need for hospital-based appointments for things like eye care, cardiology, respiratory medicine and mental health. New services will also include debt advice, employment support and stop smoking or obesity services – all of which affect people's health. Community outreach, with people going door to door, could also reduce pressure on GPs and A&E, the Government said. Ahead of the speech, Sir Keir said it was time for the health service to 'reform or die'. 'Our 10-year health plan will fundamentally rewire and future-proof our NHS so that it puts care on people's doorsteps, harnesses game-changing tech and prevents illness in the first place,' he added. Health Secretary Wes Streeting said the plan would deliver 'one of the most fundamental changes in the way we receive our healthcare in history'.


Powys County Times
21 minutes ago
- Powys County Times
Weight-loss jabs are the ‘talk of the House of Commons tea rooms'
Weight-loss jabs are the 'talk of the House of Commons tea rooms' and 'half my colleagues are on them', the Health Secretary has said as he pledged to widen access. Wes Streeting said the jabs should be available according to need, not the ability to pay, and he planned to get them into the hands of those who need them most. At the moment, people with a body mass index (BMI) of 35 or more, or 30 but with a linked health condition, can be prescribed jabs on the NHS through specialist weight-management services. Other people are paying hundreds of pounds a month to get the jabs privately. Mr Streeting told LBC radio: 'Weight-loss jabs are the talk of the House of Commons, half my colleagues are on them and are judging the rest of us saying 'you lot should be on them'. 'And the thing is, if you can afford these weight loss jabs, which can be over 200 quid a month, well that's all right for you. 'But most people in this country haven't got spared two and a half grand a year and often the people who have the worst and most challenging obesity also have the lowest income. 'So I'm bringing to weight loss jabs the principle of fairness which has underpinned the NHS. 'It should be available based on need and not the ability to pay. 'And that's what we're going to do on weight loss jabs, as well as a number of other things, including people getting more fit, more active, supporting people on diet and nutrition….that's the bit of the weight loss jab debate that sometimes gets lost. 'It's not that you can have some weight loss jabs and stuff your face with Jaffa cakes…' He said obesity cost the NHS billions a year, adding that taxes have been going 'up and up' to pay for the health service.


The Guardian
22 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Access to weight loss drugs should be based on need not wealth, says Streeting
Weight loss injections are the 'talk of the House of Commons tea rooms' and widely used by MPs, the health secretary has said as he pledged to widen public access to them. Speaking as the government launches a 10-year-plan for the NHS, Wes Streeting said access to weight loss injections such as Ozempic and Mounjaro should be 'based on need and not the ability to pay'. Currently people with a body mass index (BMI) of 35 or more, or 30 or more with a linked health condition, can be prescribed jabs on the NHS through specialist weight-management services. It is estimated that about 1.5 million people in the UK are already taking weight loss drugs, which may have been prescribed through specialist weight loss services or obtained via private prescription costing hundreds of pounds a month. Streeting told LBC radio: 'Weight loss jabs are the talk of the House of Commons; half my colleagues are on them and are judging the rest of us, saying 'you lot should be on them'. 'And the thing is, if you can afford these weight loss jabs, which can be over 200 quid a month, well, that's all right for you. But most people in this country haven't got a spare two and a half grand a year and often the people who have the worst and most challenging obesity also have the lowest income.' Streeting said he was bringing 'the principle of fairness which has underpinned the NHS' to weight loss jabs. 'It should be available based on need and not the ability to pay,' he said. The jabs would be part of a range of measures 'including people getting more fit, more active, supporting people on diet and nutrition', he said. 'That's the bit of the weight loss jab debate that sometimes gets lost. It's not that you can have some weight loss jabs and stuff your face with Jaffa Cakes.' In a speech on Thursday, Keir Starmer will say that the new 10-year-plan for the NHS marks the beginning of a 'major programme of renewal and rebuilding that will transform the entire country'. He is expected to say that the plan will 'fundamentally rewire' the health service and shift a huge amount of care from hospitals into new community health centres to bring treatment closer to people's homes and cut waiting times. This week a study estimated that the cost of the UK's epidemic of overweight and obesity had soared to £126bn a year, far higher than previous estimates. The bill includes the costs of NHS care (£12.6bn), the years people spend in poor health because of their weight (£71.4bn) and the damage to the economy (£31bn). Streeting said taxes had been going 'up and up' to pay for the health service and that the jabs were a route to not just lower weight but lower taxes too.