logo
NHS app to become default source for appointments, screenings and test results

NHS app to become default source for appointments, screenings and test results

Leader Live07-06-2025
Millions more people will receive personal health information directly to their smartphones within the next three years in a move that is expected to save the health service £200 million, the Department of Health and Social Care said.
It will also avoid the need for at least 50 million NHS letters being sent by post each year, with the Health Secretary likening the shift from analogue to digital to 'online banking or ordering a takeaway'.
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 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.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Covid XFG cases rising: What is known about new strain
Covid XFG cases rising: What is known about new strain

Rhyl Journal

time8 minutes ago

  • Rhyl Journal

Covid XFG cases rising: What is known about new strain

Covid XFG, or 'stratus' as it is also known, is a descendant of the Omicron variant and was first detected back in January 2025. It has also been referred to as a "Frankenstein" or "recombinant" strain. Today, WHO's Scientific Advisory Group on the Origins of Novel Pathogens (SAGO), a group convened by WHO, released a report on the origins of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that caused the #COVID19 pandemic. For this report, SAGO reviewed peer-reviewed papers and reviews, as well as… "This means it emerged when a person was infected with two Covid strains at once which then became a new hybrid variant," The Mirror explained. Reports of the new variant are "growing rapidly", according to the World Health Organisation (WHO), and it is showing some signs of "additional immune evasion" compared to others. The WHO has placed Covid stratus "under monitoring" due to the rise in cases worldwide. It is one of seven COVID-19 variants currently being monitored, along with the NB.1.8.1 strain, which is the dominant variant worldwide. The coming COVID-19 Winter Surge in Australia will show the world where we are actually headed is happening in South-Eats Asia and East Asia are just the 'preludes'...watch how NB.1.8.1 spawns are evolving including PQ.1, PQ.2 and even sub-lineages like PE.1. However, the WHO stated that the risk posed by the new variant was "low," and that approved COVID-19 vaccines are expected to be effective against it. The world health experts, in a recent risk evaluation, said: "Several countries in the South-East Asia Region have reported a simultaneous rise in new cases and hospitalisations, where XFG has been widely detected. "Current data do not indicate that this variant leads to more severe illness or deaths than other variants in circulation." The WHO added: "The available evidence on XFG does not suggest additional public health risks relative to the other currently circulating Omicron descendent lineages." Covid Stratus has already been detected in 38 different countries around the world. The WHO added: "The detection of XFG is increasing across several countries in various regions that are consistently sharing SARS-CoV-2 sequences with stable to slightly increasing trend in viral activity and hospitalizations." The new Stratus strain of Covid is currently the "most prevalent" in the UK, according to the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA). Health organisations are yet to list any symptoms unique to Covid Stratus. However, common symptoms of other COVID-19 variants, according to the NHS, include: COVID-19 vaccines are available in the UK, and are usually offered on the NHS in spring and early winter. The vaccine is available for those: RECOMMENDED READING: The common disease medical experts believe will cause the next global pandemic Am I eligible for free prescriptions? Yes, if you have 1 of these 11 conditions The 6 beers that are good for your health (and the ones to avoid) The NHS said: "The COVID-19 vaccines are offered because viruses change and protection fades over time. It's important to top up your protection if you're eligible." The vaccine helps: Eligible people can book in for a vaccination via the NHS website, the NHS App, or by attending a walk-in COVID-19 vaccination site.

Consultation to look at closing children's A&E unit in Ormskirk
Consultation to look at closing children's A&E unit in Ormskirk

BBC News

time41 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Consultation to look at closing children's A&E unit in Ormskirk

Major changes to hospital services in West Lancashire and Sefton are being planned, which could include the closure of the children's Accident and Emergency unit in NHS said closing the current A&E department in Ormskirk and moving it to Southport was its "preferred option".It said it would be £45m cheaper than having a combined A&E department in Ormskirk and would address "inefficiencies, workforce pressures, and fragmented care delivery". A meeting today was set to agree a 13-week formal consultation. 'Long-term solutions' Southport children's A&E department was closed 20 years ago and children currently had to travel to Ormskirk for emergency care, where the opening hours were limited to between 08:00 and midnight during the pandemic and were never reinstated.A report to a meeting of the Shaping Care Together joint committee, led by Cheshire and Merseyside and Lancashire and South Cumbria Trusts, said it was looking to "explore long-term solutions for high-quality, sustainable care".It said it currently "faces pressures from aging infrastructure, workforce shortages, financial challenges, and rising patient demand"."With increasing population aging and complexity in care needs, maintaining duplicate services across two sites is unsustainable," it said. Listen to the best of BBC Radio Lancashire on BBC Sounds and follow BBC Lancashire on Facebook, X and Instagram and watch BBC North West Tonight on BBC iPlayer.

One year in power - charts show how Labour have lived up to election promises
One year in power - charts show how Labour have lived up to election promises

Daily Mirror

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

One year in power - charts show how Labour have lived up to election promises

Twelve months on from the General Election on July 4, 2024, we have examined Keir Starmer's record against key pledges made by Labour before it went into Government Keir Starmer celebrates his first full year in No10 tomorrow, but has he delivered on the promises which won Labour a landslide victory? Twelve months on from the General Election on July 4, 2024, we have examined the Government's record against key pledges in the Labour manifesto. ‌ Surveys show that the Government's approval ratings have fallen more in the first year than any other since John Major 's in 1992/93. Opinion polls have even put Labour behind Reform UK, which has just five MPs. ‌ The prime minister insists that Labour is on track to deliver its manifesto, here we show what the official data shows to some of the pledges in the manifesto and the 'first steps to change'. Only the pledges that can be tested against publicly available data have been included. NHS During the 2024 general election, Keir Starmer revealed his 'first steps for change' - six key promises alongside a picture of him with his shirt sleeves rolled up. The first of those was to 'deliver economic stability', while the second was to 'cut NHS waiting times'. The health service had fallen into a state of permanent crisis under the Conservative government. Every month there were 10s of thousands of patients waiting in A&E for over 12 hours to be treated, while waiting lists repeatedly reached record highs. So how are things 12 months on? ‌ A&E waiting times Back in June 2024, the last month of the Tory government, only 60.5% of attendances at Type 1 major A&Es in England waited less than four hours from arrival to admission, transfer or discharge. ‌ That was up from 59.7% in May. In May of this year - the latest for which figures are available - 61.2% of attendances at major A&Es were seen within four hours. A small improvement over the course of the year but still a long way short of the 79.1% in May of 2019 (the last May before the pandemic), and even further behind the 91.4% of May 2015 when the Conservative government came to power. Waiting lists ‌ NHS waiting lists have been steadily falling under the Labour government. There were a total of 7.62 million on the waiting list when Keir Starmer came to power. That's since fallen to 7.39 million. ‌ The waiting list had reached as high as 7.76 million under the Tories in September 2023. That's compared to 4.45 million just before the pandemic, and 3.37 million in May 2015 when the Conservative government came to power. Verdict NHS waiting times have fallen. However, whether they've fallen by enough for voters to feel the benefit is another matter. The government will no doubt be hoping to see more improvements before the next election. ‌ VAT on private school fees Labour's pledge to put VAT on private school fees came into effect in January 2025. There were a total of 582,477 pupils in private schools in England during the 2024/25 academic year, according to the Department for Education's annual census. ‌ That's 11,000 fewer than a year earlier. That's higher than the government's prediction of 3,000 pupils in the first year. The number of pupils attending private schools is now higher than before the pandemic though. A total of 576,857 attended independent schools in the 2019/20 academic year. Private school pupils now make up 6.4% of the total school population, a slightly lower proportion than last year, when it was 6.5%. ‌ This is the first time since the Covid-19 pandemic that independent school pupil numbers have fallen, however they had been steadily falling in the years leading up to the pandemic. The number of pupils in independent schools fell by 6,411 between 2017/18 and 2019/20 academic years. Verdict Pledge met ‌ House building Labour pledged to build 1.5 million new homes over the course of the parliament. That works out at around 300,000 a year, or 25,000 a month. ‌ The latest official house building data shows that a total of 86,000 new homes have begun to be built during the first three quarters of the Labour government, which covers from July 2024 to March 2025. That works out at an average of 9,555 a month, less than half the rate required to meet the target. The number of houses that have started to be built under the Labour government is much higher than in the same period of 2023/24 under the Conservatives. ‌ Between July 2023 and March 2024, just 62,860 new homes were started. Verdict ‌ Some progress but improvement needed Small boats Another of Labour's 'first steps for change' was to launch a new Border Security Command with hundreds of new specialist investigators and use counter-terror powers to smash criminal boat gangs. There's no public data available for these staff numbers, or the number of gangs being 'smashed', but we can see how the number of people crossing the Channel has changed compared to previous years. ‌ Data on small boat crossings suggests all is not going to plan, however. There have been 19,982 arrivals by small boats as of July 2 this year. That's more than at the same point of any of the previous seven years for which we have data. By 26 June 2024, a total of 13,195 people had made the perilous journey across the Channel, which had been the previous record. ‌ At the same point in 2023 the total was 11,278, and in 2022 it was 12,206. Verdict ‌ Needs improvement Reduce backlog of rape cases Labour said during the campaign that they would 'fast-track rape cases, with specialist courts at every Crown Court location in England and Wales.' Despite this though, the number of rape cases in the Crown Court backlog has continued to grow. ‌ There were a total of 1,294 cases of rape in the Crown Court backlog in England and Wales before the Covid-19 pandemic hit the country. That shot up during lockdown, doubling to 2,580 cases by March 2022. It has only continued to rise ever since. By the time Labour came to power there were 4,686 outstanding Crown Court cases in England and Wales. That has since increased to 5,486 cases at the end of March, the latest month for which figures are available. ‌ It's a similar story too for all offences, not just rape. There were a total of 40,903 cases in the Crown Court backlog in March 2020. By the time Labour came to power there were 70,978 outstanding Crown Court cases, and a total of 76,957 as of March 2025. ‌ Verdict Needs improvement 2030 ban on petrol and diesel car sales There were almost 1.3 million fully electric cars registered on UK roads at the end of December 2024. That's almost 200,000 more than before the general election. ‌ However, the number of electric cars on our roads has been steadily increasing for some time. Back in January 2022 there were just 441,200 on our roads, three times fewer than today. The availability of public charging points could become an issue, with some parts of the country far better served than others. There were a total of 193,098 public electric vehicle charging points across the UK in January, according to figures from the Department of Transport. ‌ Just 49 public electric vehicle charging points in the whole of the East Hampshire local authority, which works out as 33 vehicles per charging point. That's a higher rate than in any local authority in the UK. Meanwhile, Melton in Leicestershire has 29 per charging point, as do North Kesteven and St Albans. Meanwhile, London has the most electric car-friendly infrastructure in the country. Three of the capital's boroughs have more than one public charging point for every electric car registered there. Hammersmith and Fulham has more public electric charging points than any local authority in the UK - 2,668 - which works out at 0.6 cars per charger. Southwark has 0.8 cars per charger, as does Hackney. Coventry is the most electric car-friendly council outside of the capital. The city's 2,272 public charging points works out as 0.6 cars per charger, the joint lowest rate in the country. ‌ Verdict Making progress

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store