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Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of London logoLink to Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of London
. 1997 Jan-Feb;31(1):70–73.

Failure of Patients to Attend a Medical Outpatient Clinic

A V Simmons 1, K Atkinson 2, P Atkinson 3, B Crosse 4
PMCID: PMC5420839  PMID: 9044203

Abstract

Failure of patients to attend outpatient clinics is common and costly. In one consultant's general medical and gastrointestinal outpatient clinic, 38% of new patients failed to keep at least one appointment, 17% did not attend for their first outpatient consultation and, of these, 59% failed to keep a second appointment sent to them. Of the patients who did attend for their first consultation 12% did not keep their next two appointments. Failure to attend was more common in men, young patients, patients from certain inner city areas, patients on the lists of certain general practices, and those who had already defaulted once. Possible background reasons for default are discussed, suggestions for further study proposed, and an attempt made to look for ways to reduce the extent of the problem.

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Contributor Information

A V Simmons, Consultant Physician, St James's University Hospital, Leeds.

K Atkinson, Clinical Audit Facilitator, St James's University Hospital, Leeds.

P Atkinson, Clinical Audit Facilitator, St James's University Hospital, Leeds.

B Crosse, Senior Registrar in Medicine, St James's University Hospital, Leeds.


Articles from Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of London are provided here courtesy of Royal College of Physicians

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