The partnership was given a favourable mention in 2014 in the NHS
Five Year Forward View. It already conducts 80% of consultations remotely using phone or
Skype. Sarb Basi, the managing director, said in response to the NHS
Five Year Forward View that it would be a “natural, logical progression” to manage capitated budgets for health and social care budgets through an integrated care organisation, building a "coherent strategic partnership" with an acute hospital and working with
community health trusts to incorporate nursing and therapy services. This appeared to connect with comments made by
Simon Stevens to the House of Commons health select committee in October 2014 that he envisaged in Birmingham two large groupings of GPs - the Vitality Partnership and another which would employ geriatricians. It is suggested that under
Simon Stevens' plan large primary care organisations like Modality could be in a position to challenge the dominance of NHS
hospital trusts It has extended the primary care services to include urology, dermatology, rheumatology and x-rays.
David Cameron cited the partnership in May 2015 when he praised Birmingham's transformation of primary care. It signed an agreement with
Sandwell and West Birmingham Hospitals NHS Trust in November 2017 which was a “commitment to work collaboratively over the next three to five years with a view to forming a much more vertically integrated relationship”. Nick Harding, one of the co-founders, and chair of Sandwell and West Birmingham
Clinical Commissioning Group was reckoned by the
Health Service Journal to be the 47th most influential person in the English NHS in 2015. ==Expansion==