This is the final post in our series covering our January Protection Forum. In this section, attendees disucssed how to get more GPs and insurers using electronic GP reports, and what the current barriers are that need to be dealt with to increase adoption.
This is absolutely a high priority for the ABI. For a lot of GPs they don’t want to have to manage an extra system. The ABI is also working on is for insurers to ultimately be able to access the data through the patient’s own consent, in which case GPRs would become redundant.
Informed consent sounds good, but I don’t think the BMA will like that because they’ll lose revenue from the insurers. We also should be careful about encouraging less competition.
A relevant link in the chain are the GP’s practice management systems and how they interact with the eGPRs. If anyone has a situation where a claim isn’t being paid, please let me know because there are many journalists who would like to know about that.
Ian McKenna:
I mean, on the question of informed consent, that sounds really good to me. I guess the BMA won’t like that because based on David’s numbers of volumes, I think if I get my sums right, insurers are spending about £200 million a year, which is ending up in GPs pockets. I don’t imagine for one moment they’re going to enjoy that revenue disappearing from them. I do think, Peter, we need to be a bit careful also in the context of competition. We’ve got to be careful about advocating that we go one route.
Peter Hamilton: I did try to make that point that that is difficult, but I think it is potentially a barrier. I don’t think we’ll ever get to one route. But I think the more we have, the more challenging.
Ian McKenna:
I mean, one of the other issues in this, just to try and put this all into context is not dissimilar from certainly the wealth side of the advice market, though there not so many players in the protection market. A very relevant link in this chain is the GPs’ practise management systems of which I think there are three main ones. There was one that I think went out of business last year, but one of them has got taken over by another one.
Coming onto points I was going to make and I think we need, as you just identified, Peter, iGPR is actually a name of one particular service. We probably need to be quite careful in our definition. There are there are at least three or four others.
On payments, actually certainly one of that I’m aware of, and I don’t know about the others, but will ask the questions. At least one of the systems is actually offering to take care of the payment and get the payment for the doctor and remit it to them. So it’s even easier for them to get paid. And there is certainly one where they’ll suck all the data out and do the reduction that does have to work through the practise management system. But I believe most are linked up to that, if not all, literally one of the players can suck all the data out will do the redaction for them of anything that shouldn’t be shared so that you don’t even need to worry about the issue where there’s only somebody that comes in half a day a week to do this because that can be taken care of for them.
The last thing I was going to say is, again, coming back to David, if you’ve got a claim that’s not being paid, let’s have a chat privately because if you’ve got a claim not being paid, I can think of a couple of personal finance journalists on national newspapers. I know well who would love to ring a GP surgery and say, “why are this family destitute because you can’t be bothered to fill in the forms?”
And I’ll make that open offer to anybody on this call. If you’ve got a claim that’s not being paid for those reasons. Call me, I can think of several journalists that would love to get their teeth into that because, people not being paid, claims not being paid is appalling. And of course, the poor person not getting paid to a certain extent is blaming the insurance company, which is obviously not fair. So David, love to speak to separately and anyone else needs some help with me on that.
Advisers need to encourage providers who aren’t using electronic GP reports to get a move on. The providers spend lots of money on their online systems, but 60-70% of our cases go for further medical information so we get all kinds of delays.
If advisers make a point to work with the insurers that do use eGPRs then more and more of them will do it, and then surgeries will see an increase of digital requests and eventually more and more of them will adapt.
Is it a case of getting GPs to see the value of insurance from a healthcare perspective as well as a financial one? Clients can access remote GPs and physio services, and also afford to take time off work to get rest when they need it. A lot of the problem comes back to a lack of trust in insurers by the public, of which GPs are a part.
The other element for doctors is greater data protection, because every time they send a client very sensitive personal information through the post, they put themselves at risk, and the electronic route is inherently more secure.
A lot of surgeries hardly get any insurance reports, especially those not in big cities, so the imperative to change becomes very small. While eGPRs are more secure, they worry that when the system becomes automated something might be submitted that should have been redacted and the GP can get in trouble for having exposed that information. So the GPs are managing a lot of competing risks and pressures here.
It’s possible to get a lot of evidence needed without a GP report, and if we’re able to get more information and put together a better picture for the underwriter, we get a quicker outcome. There’s a lot more advisers can do to help the journey and stop these GP reports being needed.
We’ve had a lot of instances where with all the information we’ve gathered ourselves from the client and the GP we were able to get a fast decision with no GP report.





