Semble News
Today’s patients have more power, information and options than ever before. Semble's new report, 'Beyond the search bar: From AI curiosity to connected care', reveals 52% of people want to book appointments online, 46% want to see the same clinician each time and almost a quarter are turning to generative AI for healthcare advice.
It’s clear that people are no longer willing to wait on hold, repeat their symptoms or leave their appointment with incomplete information. They want healthcare that matches the rest of their digital lives: simple and personalised.
For clinics, that means one thing: patients will go where they feel seen, heard and supported, and that often begins with technology that makes accessing their care feel effortless.
So how can clinics bridge this expectation gap and remain a patient’s first choice? It’s not about adding more tech for tech’s sake, but rather using the right tools to remove friction and enhance communication in order to make space for the human side of care.
The main frustration for patients is having to call to book appointments. The 8am scramble to sit on hold with reception now belongs to another era – in 2025, that’s a deal-breaker.
Online booking lets patients self-serve at a time that suits them, whether that’s during their lunch break or late into the evening. This creates an instant sense of autonomy, giving patients control over when and with whom they’re seen, while you stay in control of locations, clinicians and services available.
Crucially, giving patients the opportunity to choose their clinician can help foster a sense of continuity and trust, which are two key factors in building long-term patient relationships.
“I see patients who work eight to eight. How are they supposed to phone for an appointment?” Says Rahim Kanji, Consultant Cardiologist at OneWelbeck. “With online booking, they can go onto my website, see my availability and it automatically adds to my diary.”
This kind of simple access doesn’t just make life easier for patients; it reduces admin pressure for your team, frees up your phone lines and creates a more efficient workflow for everyone.
With nearly a quarter of patients now turning to generative AI for medical advice, clinics have an opportunity to redefine their role as trusted guides.
Rather than discouraging patients from using tools like ChatGPT, clinicians can turn this behaviour into a starting point for meaningful discussion — asking what patients have read online and helping them interpret it with clinical context. It transforms digital noise into teachable moments and reinforces professional expertise.
You can surface this early through pre-consultation questionnaires, giving patients space to mention whether they’ve consulted AI or social media before their appointment. This gives clinicians the context they need ahead of time so the consultation starts on the right footing.
Clinics can also use their own AI-enabled tools in order to make space for these conversations: AI medical scribes allow for more time and connection during consultations, making patients feel more comfortable and listened to, encouraging an open dialogue.
Our report also shows limited time with clinicians remains one of patients' biggest barriers to their care. Both AI scribes and pre-consultation questionnaires help address this, not by replacing human interaction, but by protecting it. Clinicians can’t always extend appointment lengths, but they can make better use of the time they have.
These tools remove much of the administrative distraction, making appointments feel calmer, more focused and more personal. In that quieter, more present environment, the patient-clinician relationship strengthens and patients feel more at ease to open up.
Follow-up messaging and post-appointment communication are powerful ways to build trust and reduce confusion.
Nearly two-thirds of patients told us they’ve left an appointment unclear about their diagnosis or next steps. Sending a short summary or automated messages after a consultation not only reinforces understanding, but signals to their patient your clinic cares about continuity and outcomes, not just attendance.
These touchpoints are small but significant. They help patients feel supported, remind them of next actions and open the door for further questions or clarification. It’s a simple way to turn a one-off visit into an ongoing relationship and keep patients in their pathway.
A single, centralised patient portal can solve many frustrations in one go. From accessing results to reviewing previous notes or booking the next appointment, it gives patients a single, secure space to manage their care.
Patients increasingly expect this kind of transparency — much like online banking, they want 24/7 access to their own data. Clinics that provide it don’t just offer convenience; they build confidence and loyalty by showing that information belongs to the patient as much as the provider.
Patients are no longer comparing clinics to each other, they’re comparing them to the ease of every other online experience they have.
Rebuilding relevance with today’s patient doesn’t require radical transformation. It’s about removing the small but significant barriers that make care feel slow or disconnected. Digital booking, AI support, smart follow-ups and patient portals all form part of a single promise: healthcare that meets patients where they are, on their terms.
When clinics combine the right digital tools with human empathy, they don’t just meet expectations, they set the new standard for care.
You've come to the right place. Take a look at our new 'Beyond the search bar' hub, to find out more about what today's patients expect from their care and how you can give it to them.
To close out Patient Safety Month, UK charity The Patients Association tell us what patient safety means to the people they support and how genuine partnerships, built on six key principles of patient care, can create safer, better healthcare for all.
The Patients Association is dedicated to amplifying the patient voice across the UK, working to improve care and influence vital healthcare policies.