Message-based consultation app Docly registers with CQC

  • 23 August 2019
Message-based consultation app Docly registers with CQC

A message-based GP consultation app has been registered with the Care Quality Commission (CQC).

Docly allows patients to fill out a questionnaire about their symptoms and a GP is able to message them via the app to offer advice on suitable treatment and, if needed, send a prescription.

Through Docly, GP practices are able to access a network of doctors without requiring patients to deregister from their regular GP. This ensures patients can get a quick response.

The service was officially registered with the CQC on 9 August and was launched in the UK a few days later, on 12 August.

Barnaby Poulton, managing director of Docly, said: ā€œWe are now helping patients who may otherwise have needed to take time off work or waited over two weeks for an appointment.

ā€œDocly is supporting the people that need it the most, getting care to people at the right place at the right time.ā€

Docly, a spin-off from Min Doktor, a Swedish healthtech service, announced in June that former NHS Digital CEO, Andy Williams, had been appointed chairman of its board.

At the time of the announcement, Williams said: ā€œI’m delighted to be chairing the board of a company working towards the digital transformation the NHS at a time when UK general practice is changing. Record numbers of GPs are facing burnout and are leaving the NHS.

ā€œDocly offers the option for doctors to work flexibly, conduct consultations in their own time and stay in practice. Docly already has a track record of offering primary care services through the right channel at the right time in Sweden and it’s a pleasure to bring this successful approach to the UK.ā€

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