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Number of NHS Health Checks increases but more people decline

Number of NHS Health Checks increases but more people decline

Three in five people invited for an NHS Health Check the past year did not take up the offer, an analysis of NHS data shows.

In 2023/24, 3.6 million people were invited to attend an NHS Health Check – the highest ever level.

But of these 2.1 million did not take up the offer, the figures up to March 2024 show.

The number of people missing out on a health check – offered to 40-74 year olds every five years to manage their risk of heart and kidney disease, stroke and diabetes – increased by a third from the previous year, the figures show.

However, because more people were invited, overall the numbers being checked increased last year, the figures confirmed.

In all, 1.41 million people had an NHS Health Check in 2023/24, the highest proportion since 2014/15, the analysis by Broadstone found.

A recent analysis of UK Biobank data found attending an NHS Health Check is associated with a lower risk of both death and several diseases.

This included a 19% lower rate of dementia diagnosis and a 23% lower risk of death from cardiovascular disease.

The Government had put forward proposals last year to screen women for menopause within the NHS Health Check.

Digital health checks are being rolled out and councils have also been expanding to offer them in pharmacies and through the voluntary sector but most are still offered through general practice.

Concerns have been raised in the past about whether those who would most benefit are those taking up the offer of a health check.

And the RCGP has asked that the programme is based on evidence of improved outcomes for patients.


          

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READERS' COMMENTS [3]

Please note, only GPs are permitted to add comments to articles

SUBHASH BHATT 13 July, 2024 7:32 am

People don’t want to see doctors unless they have to. When they do want to see doctors, they find it difficult.

Derval Damner 13 July, 2024 11:01 am

Inverse care law, exacerbated by (justified) concerns about access as alluded to by SB. No doubt Darzi will have the answer (not).

A B 15 July, 2024 1:59 pm

We’re moving to a system where people don’t get ill because its all been prevented by health checks. Nobody will get diabetes because it’ll be prevented with a blood test at 40. The menopause will be abolished because every woman will get a yearly menopause screen from age 35. Dementia will be a thing of the past because everyone will get a dementia questionnaire when they retire. Alcoholism will go away too with the right questionnaires opportunistically applied. The country will save a fortune and we have the statistics to prove it. You wont need old fashioned Dr appointments once all the preventative stuff has kicked in. Thats our future. I know this is all true because I read some brainless moron pushing all this in an article on PULSE several months back. I don’t think they had any medical training but that doesn’t matter because they were running things for some reason. Either that or they were a surgeon and know how to slice up a liver. Thats good enough for the UK