The shift toward same-day access in NHS primary care is accelerating. Driven by contractual reform, rising patient expectations, and the persistent challenge of access demand outstripping GP capacity, same-day access hubs, urgent treatment centres, and integrated urgent care services are reshaping how primary care is delivered — and who delivers it. For clinicians, PCN leaders, and GP practices planning their workforce for the next two to three years, understanding this shift is no longer optional.
What Is Driving the Same-Day Access Agenda?
GP Contract changes introduced from 2023 committed NHS England to ensuring patients could contact their GP practice on the same day they call and receive a routine appointment within two weeks. Practices that cannot demonstrate adequate access face targeted support and scrutiny from ICBs. This has accelerated the development of same-day access infrastructure at both practice and PCN level across England.
At the same time, NHS 111 and A&E pressures have increased the volume of urgent care demand being directed back into primary care settings — particularly urgent treatment centres (UTCs) and GP-led urgent care hubs. The result is a rapidly growing market for clinicians with acute presentation skills who can work at pace in time-pressured primary care environments.
The Four Roles at the Forefront of Same-Day Access
The Integrated Urgent Care Model: Where Primary Care Is Heading
The NHS Long Term Workforce Plan and the NHS England Access Recovery Plan both point toward an integrated urgent care model where primary care, NHS 111, community services, and urgent treatment centres work more closely together. In this model, clinical triage happens centrally — typically through 111 or GP-led triage — and patients are directed to the most appropriate clinician based on need rather than simply the next available GP appointment.
For clinicians, this creates a richer range of working environments and clinical variety. A paramedic practitioner may see patients in a GP surgery in the morning and conduct home visits through an urgent care service in the afternoon. An ANP may work across a same-day access hub and a chronic disease clinic in the same week. Portfolio working within primary care settings is becoming the norm rather than the exception.
SHR Group's placement data shows ECP and ENP bookings have more than doubled since 2022 as urgent treatment centre capacity has expanded and PCNs have sought same-day access solutions outside of GP sessions. The most acute shortage is in ECPs with primary care experience — clinicians who combine emergency skills with primary care system knowledge are commanding premium rates across England.
What This Means for Workforce Planning
Same-day access models require a fundamentally different approach to workforce planning compared to traditional GP appointment booking. Key considerations for GP practices and PCNs:
- Multi-professional deployment — the right clinician must see the right patient. Clinical triage by an ANP or paramedic at the front of the access system significantly improves capacity utilisation by matching acuity to clinician skill level
- Flexible rota management — same-day demand is inherently variable, requiring more flexible staffing models than standard scheduled appointments. Locum capacity for surge periods is an important planning tool
- Training investment — deploying paramedics or ENPs in primary care settings requires investment in induction and primary care-specific training. Skills acquired in emergency settings do not automatically transfer without support
- Performance monitoring — tracking outcomes, patient satisfaction, onward referral rates, and appointment conversion rates by clinician type enables continuous optimisation of the access model
- Locum capacity for peaks — seasonal and day-of-week variation in same-day demand means locum ECP, ENP, and GP capacity remains essential even for well-staffed services
For Clinicians: Career Opportunities in Same-Day Access
The growth of same-day access services has created significant new career opportunities for ECPs, ENPs, paramedic practitioners, and advanced nurses in primary care settings. Compared to pure emergency department work, primary care same-day access roles typically offer:
- More regular and predictable working hours (daytime and evenings rather than full shift patterns)
- Greater clinical variety — managing both acute and sub-acute presentations
- Closer integration with long-term care and follow-up, providing more satisfying clinical continuity
- Competitive locum rates — particularly in the current high-demand market
- ARRS reimbursement eligibility for paramedic practitioner roles in PCN settings
Looking for ECP, ENP or Paramedic Practitioner Roles?
SHR Group specialises in placing ECPs, ENPs, and paramedic practitioners in same-day access services, urgent treatment centres, and OOH providers across the UK. Register a vacancy or submit your CV today.