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NHS Direct launches self-assessment tool

Tags: NHS Direct   Web 2.0   website  

23 Dec 2009

NHS Direct has launched an online self-assessment tool that it hopes will reduce demand on its telephone service over the winter months.

The health helpline said the initial assessment tool would enable patients to bypass an initial telephone assessment and instead go on to the NHS Direct website to assess their symptoms and get advice.

EHI Primary Care revealed last week that NHS Direct is to miss some of its key performance targets for the last three months of the year, and the online assessment tool is seen as one of the ways to help it get back on track.

NHS Direct said the online assessment mirrored the clinical assessment criteria used over the telephone by health advisers. Patients would be asked similar questions to those asked over the telephone and the outcomes, based on the answers, would be the same.

Nick Chapman, chief executive of NHS Direct, said the introduction of the online assessment tool followed the success of the helpline’s cold and flu symptom checker that was used at the start of the swine flu pandemic.

He added: “This new tool will mean that our nurses on the phones will have more time to deal with people who most benefit from a telephone assessment or those people with the most urgent needs.”

The assessment tool provides advice and information on all symptoms and conditions and includes self-care advice as well as directing patients to another health service in appropriate.

People who need further advice can click to get a call-back from an NHS Direct nurse adviser.

NHS Direct said winter was traditionally the health service’s busiest period and that in November this year it had received 70% more calls about cold and flu than in November 2008. The cold and flu symptom checker has been used more than 5m times since the end of April.

Fiona Barr

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Reader's Comments
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Reader's Comments

1

Can IT provide the same answer?

24 Dec 09 10:12

I think it will, every pathway through the alogrithms leads to a screen saying "Go To A&E" ... Just like the phone lines do!


2

what percentage of callers are referred to A&E?

02 Jan 10 12:01

Are the details of how calls are dealt with published?


3

website lacks sufficient education.

nflorence59@yahoo.com

08 Jun 10 21:06

The biggest problem, I have found, with the website is that it doesn't advise web-walkers that there are "degrees" of a symptoms i.e. no grey areas where if the symptom is present, then this symptom plus another, makes the risk higher. Nor that, in order to worry about some symptoms they should have more than one of them, the classic being meningitis. Countless people seem to think that Light sensitivity for example means there fore it must be meningitis - where as we all know many viral infections will do this and for it to be serious it is usually extreme light sensitivity - and even then it isn't a forgone conclusion. Its the whole package of symptoms not just one of them.

A little education built into the website would help people to make sensible decisions about what care they need.

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