111 Referral Standard: Final Report
9.6 Appendix 6 – Joint GPIT Committee Mentimeter outputs
| Q1 | Currently, how easy is it, in the clinical system document workflow, to distinguish a ‘PEM for Information’ from a ‘PEM for Action’? | Easy – 0 Somewhat easy – 1 Quite difficult - 4 Impossible - 1 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Q2 | Is a 111 Encounter where a PEM for information is produced coded into the patient record? | Yes, always - 0 Sometimes - 4 Never - 2 | ||
| Q3 | What things could or should trigger alerts or actions in the workflow ? | Need to ensure that we don’t create a gap between the expectations of the patient or 111 services and the general practices obligations. A standardised free-text box for clinician only assessment to highlight specific action or alert to registered general practice. Safeguarding referral, clinician-to-clinician concern, need for urgent ref (USC referral criteria met) The patient or carer needs be given clear written information to satiety net if action not met Real safeguarding issues should be referred Specific action should be a referral No alerts should be for action in less than a week | ||
| Q4 | Are prescriptions given by 111 If included in a PEM for information coded into the patient record? | Yes always - 0 Sometimes - 3 Never - 0 | ||
| Q5 | Excluding demographics what order should the New 111 Information Standard appear on the 111 PEM for Information? | Respondent 1 presenting complaint Differential diagnosis Management plan | Respondent 2 Action needed, diagnosis, history of complaint, examination, investigation, treatment | Respondent 3 Presenting Symptoms Differential diagnosis Management plan Action to be taken by general practice |
Page last updated: 15 January 2026