What Happens When a Medical Centre Stops Putting Patients on Hold
The before-and-after story of a 4-doctor GP clinic that ditched hold queues. What changed in 6 weeks.
Let's walk through a realistic scenario. A busy 4-doctor GP clinic in a suburban area, running at capacity most days. 3 full-time receptionists, 2 doctors per shift, 1 practice manager. Annual revenue around $950,000. The problem: patients on hold during peak hours. Lots of them.
The "Before" Picture
Monday morning, 8:45am. All 3 receptionists are on the phone or at the desk. The phone system shows 7 calls in queue. Hold time: 4 minutes. One caller hangs up after 2 minutes. Another waits, books a slot, but posts a complaint on Google that evening: "On hold for ages."
Here's what a typical day looked like:
Before: Peak Hours (8:30am–9:30am)
Receptionist A: handles walk-in check-ins
Receptionist B: takes appointment bookings over phone
Receptionist C: processes Medicare reconciliation + admin
Result: One phone line unattended. Calls roll to voicemail.
After: Peak Hours (8:30am–9:30am)
Receptionist A: handles walk-in check-ins
Receptionist B: takes priority bookings over phone
Receptionist C: processes Medicare reconciliation + admin
AI: handles routine calls, triage, after-hours overflow
The clinic had 3 receptionists, yet callers still waited. Why? Because each receptionist was juggling multiple tasks. Answering phone calls is only one of them. Processing check-ins, updating patient records, reconciling Medicare, handling prior authorisation — all of that needs a human. But it meant the phones fell through the cracks during surges.
The Staffing Cost Reality
The practice manager had considered hiring a 4th receptionist. At $52,000/year salary + 11.5% superannuation + payroll tax + training + turnover risk, a 4th full-time hire would cost $72,000 per year. They would only really be needed during the 3 peak windows each day (morning, lunch, afternoon). That's 3-4 hours per day of actual necessity. The other 4–5 hours, the receptionist would be on admin tasks or quiet time.
So the clinic was essentially paying $72,000 per year to cover 3–4 peak hours per day. Inefficient, but necessary — or so they thought.
What Changed
The clinic implemented an AI call system. Here's the specific setup:
- Inbound call triage: Every incoming call is answered immediately (no hold queue). The AI asks: "Are you calling to book an appointment, report a problem, or request an urgent callback?"
- Appointment bookings: For routine bookings, the AI handles the entire transaction — asks for availability preference, confirms the time, takes the patient's phone number for confirmation SMS.
- Urgent triage: If a patient says "I need to see the doctor today because...", the call transfers to a receptionist instantly. Real urgency gets human attention.
- After-hours: After 5:30pm, the AI takes messages, captures patient details, and flags them for morning staff. Urgent calls can still page the on-call doctor.
Real Example: Tuesday 9:15am
Before: Patient calls to book a routine check-up. Gets put on hold. Waits 3 minutes. Receptionist books the appointment. Call ends. Patient annoyed but booked.
After: Patient calls. AI answers in 3 seconds. "I'd like to book an appointment." AI: "Are you a new patient or existing?" Patient: "Existing." AI pulls up next available slots (Dr. Williams, Tuesday 2:30pm or Thursday 10am), offers both. Patient selects Thursday 10am. AI: "Confirmed. You're booked with Dr. Williams Thursday 10am. I'll send a confirmation text to [patient confirms number]." Call duration: 1 minute 15 seconds. Patient delighted — got through instantly.
The Impact: 6 Weeks In
After 6 weeks, the numbers told the story:
- Call answer rate: went from 78% (calls answered within 10 minutes) to 98% (calls answered within 30 seconds).
- Hold time: dropped from 4–6 minutes to 22 seconds average.
- Patient satisfaction with phone experience: increased from 62% ("I had to wait") to 91% ("I got through easily").
- Google reviews mentioning phones: negative comments dropped. New reviews said "I was impressed how quickly I could book."
- Receptionist stress: noticeably lower. They were no longer handling the phone queue. They could focus on in-person care and admin work without constant interruptions.
The Financial Outcome
Did they hire the 4th receptionist? No. Instead, they:
- Kept their 3 receptionists, but removed the peak-time chaos
- Gained peace of mind knowing after-hours calls were still being captured
- Recovered the $72,000 per year they weren't spending on extra staff
- Saw a boost in appointment rebooking — patients who would have hung up now booked within seconds, so fewer cancellations and no-shows
More subtly, they saw a boost in patient perception. "I can actually get through to this clinic" is powerful. It's the difference between a 4.2-star Google rating and a 4.7-star rating. New patient acquisition is higher. Existing patients are less likely to switch to a competitor.
The real win wasn't staff reduction. It was staff relief and patient retention. The receptionists got their job back — the human part of it. The AI took the machine part (handling voicemail, triage, routine booking). Patients felt heard. The practice made more money without hiring anyone new.
Why This Matters for Your Practice
If you're running a medical centre with 2–4 doctors, this is your story. You're caught between two choices: hire more staff (expensive, hard to recruit) or accept that some patients will be on hold (and frustrating). There's actually a third option: let the AI handle peak overflow while your receptionists do the irreplaceable work — the human touch, the complex problem-solving, the patient relationships.
The clinic in this scenario didn't change their staffing model. They changed what their staff was doing. And the whole practice benefited.