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The growing pains of the 2024/2025 Portugal’s NHS telephone triage system national rollout

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Resumo:In 2024, the Portuguese NHS introduced “Ligue Antes, Salve Vidas” (“Call Before You Go, Save Lives”), making phone triage through the national SNS 24 line compulsory prior to an Emergency Department (ED) visit in most NHS Local Health Units. While the policy was rightfully concerned with improving timely access to urgent care, it was quickly rolled out without a corresponding investment in infrastructure. The phone triage system’s ability to meet growing call demand was assessed using full population administrative data (January 2024–May 2025), applying a Holt–Winters model to project call volumes. These demand forecasts were compared with a fixed benchmark of installed capacity, allowing for the estimation of unmet demand and waiting times. The authors’ projections show that, without structural reinforcement, the SNS 24 line will face persistent overload, with up to 1 million unanswered calls during the 2025–26 winter season. Unless structural adaptations are implemented, current gaps threaten clinical safety, equity, and public trust. Robust policy options like AI-supported triage, targeted workforce reinforcement, and enhanced transparency are critical to ensure system resilience.
Autores principais:Goiana-da-Silva, Francisco
Outros Autores:Amorim-Lopes, Mário; Correia, Fernando; Pereira, João; Ribeiro, Afonso; Tude-Graça, Duarte; Pessoa-e-Costa, Tomás; Cabral, Luís; Costa, Eduardo; Nunes, Alexandre Morais; Ashrafian, Hutan; Darzi, Ara
Assunto:AI triage digital health emergency department health system resilience healthcare optimization service overload Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
Ano:2025
País:Portugal
Tipo de documento:artigo
Tipo de acesso:acesso aberto
Instituição associada:Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Idioma:inglês
Origem:Repositório Institucional da UNL
Descrição
Resumo:In 2024, the Portuguese NHS introduced “Ligue Antes, Salve Vidas” (“Call Before You Go, Save Lives”), making phone triage through the national SNS 24 line compulsory prior to an Emergency Department (ED) visit in most NHS Local Health Units. While the policy was rightfully concerned with improving timely access to urgent care, it was quickly rolled out without a corresponding investment in infrastructure. The phone triage system’s ability to meet growing call demand was assessed using full population administrative data (January 2024–May 2025), applying a Holt–Winters model to project call volumes. These demand forecasts were compared with a fixed benchmark of installed capacity, allowing for the estimation of unmet demand and waiting times. The authors’ projections show that, without structural reinforcement, the SNS 24 line will face persistent overload, with up to 1 million unanswered calls during the 2025–26 winter season. Unless structural adaptations are implemented, current gaps threaten clinical safety, equity, and public trust. Robust policy options like AI-supported triage, targeted workforce reinforcement, and enhanced transparency are critical to ensure system resilience.