Escalating pressures on GP family doctors

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General Practice crisis – ‘situation critical’ on Hunt’s watch

Threats from private GP companies masquerading under the NHS logo, claims that ‘apps’ are better than seeing your GP,  and now selected patients encouraged to transfer to new central London practices (see photo) using ‘Babylon’s smartphone apps without any convincing evidence base and a motion from some Bedfordshire GPs to be allowed to go private  – all this undermines doctors and their colleagues in primary care deliberately let down by Jeremy Hunt and this Government’s policy to underfund the NHS into a crisis that drives those that can afford it into the arms of private healthcare.

The true context is this: there are fewer full time equivalent GPs now than in September 2015 – we are short of thousands of GPs and nurses, leaving surgeries struggling to cope. This is the direct result of criminally under-funding primary care services (family doctors and related general practice services). 

Spending on primary care has fallen from 9.6% of the NHS budget in 2006 to 7.9% today – a lower proportion of a total NHS budget, itself severely challenged since 2009.

The Secretary of State for Health, Jeremy Hunt, has made little effort to act on warnings given to him by the medical profession for years. His counter claims that he is saviour of the NHS have been debunked by Stephen Hawking. Conditions for GPs have deteriorated. Many GPs work 12-14 hour non-stop days. Often they deal with 60-70 contacts a day and feel unsafe doing so. GPs are even being driven away from the profession as many are forced to pay extortionate fees for their indemnity (professional insurance) – some pay over £10,000 yearly.

This is deliberate neglect from Government:

  • unsafe workloads
  • lack of GPs, rising vacancies
  • hugely underfunded NHS
  • rising indemnity costs
    And one of the greatest risk factors … …
  • Jeremy Hunt himself – a politician who just gives lip service to GPs and the needs of the population they serve

We hold him accountable.

Please download a PDF of our leaflet on the General Practice Meltdown

Context for retrograde motion to promote private GP practice

The above context of underfunding in the NHS, created by Hunt, has left GPs feeling frustrated and desperate. Amidst many strongly worded motions in defence of the NHS, one deeply retrograde motion has been put forward by Bedfordshire Local Medical Committee (LMC) to the first ever Conference of England LMC Representatives on November 10th. The motion to be voted is part of the agenda for the conference and states:

Given that a number of GPs genuinely feel that they can no longer operate within the NHS, conference calls on GPC England to urgently look at how these GPs can be supported to operate within a private, alternative model.

Essentially, GP leaders will be voting on whether the British Medical Association (BMA) should support some practices to become private. Whilst the Bedfordshire delegates will argue that some GPs genuinely feel they can no longer operate under NHS England, what this demonstrates is just how much damage the current Government have already done to our health service. Several other motions describe NHS England’s five-year plan for general practice as ‘woefully inadequate’ and ‘pointless’, with Kent LMC demanding that ‘the GPFV [General Practice Forward View 2016] is replaced by an appropriate rescue package’.

Keep Our NHS Public urges GPs to vote against this motion on 10 November. Instead, join your many GP colleagues in KONP in the fight for a fully-funded NHS and help to stop and reverse privatisation in the NHS.

Don’t be fooled by the call to see your doctor on your smart phone

Another threat to Primary Care was kick-started this week. Five Central London GP surgeries  have rolled out a “GP at Hand” service in an area of London covering 3.5 million patients.

It uses a platform operated by private health app maker Babylon, and offers an “interactive symptom checker” that performs “triage” as well as health tracking and prescription services for its user.
Dr Margaret McCartney, GP and a frequent contributor for the British Medical Journal, is quoted by The Register as stating:

“I am deeply concerned about the process Babylon have used to test their symptom checker app. They initially said they had done an independent study of safety … Many doctors have raised concerns about it. The pilot result has not been released and despite asking for months for details about it none have been forthcoming. The NHS are now allowing this company to operate as an NHS GP practice.”

Chair of the Royal College of General Practitioners, Prof Helen Stokes-Lampard, has also expressed concerns quoted by the BBC:

“We are really worried that schemes like this are creating a twin-track approach to NHS general practice and that patients are being ‘cherry-picked’, which could actually increase the pressures on traditional GPs based in the community.”

GP at Hand could cause further stress and harm to the GP work force who are already stretched and depleted through this partnership with a privately owned platform – choosing to be paid for the young, fit and healthy and to exclude, as they explicitly intend to, pregnant women and those with long-term conditions both physical and mental health and areas of care including safeguarding of children and vulnerable adults.

Links to media coverage on these events

Mainstream media have picked up on the story of GPs voting to privatise:

Pulse – Revealed: How online GP company Babylon can sign up millions of patients

The Independent – NHS GPs demand powers to run private services where funding is insufficient

The Times – Fears of NHS exodus as family doctors vote on going private

The Daily Mail – Now family doctors threaten to quit and go private in protest at pressures the Health Service faces

GP Online – Some GPs feel they can no longer work in the NHS, LMCs warn

Pulse – GP leaders prepare for explosive vote on practices leaving the NHS

The Telegraph – GPs to vote on breaking away from NHS to set up private model

For more coverage of this story and on the recent findings that policy and planning for the entire NHS workforce are ‘not fit for purpose’ see Google News

Babylon and GP at Hand

BMJ – Innovation without sufficient evidence is a disservice to all

The Guardian – See a GP on my smartphone? Sorry, I’m not convinced

GP Online – Cherry-picking patients for smartphone GP service threatens NHS, doctors warn

BBC – NHS offers smartphone GP appointments

The Times – virtual surgeries favour young and healthy

The Register – Londoners: Ready to swap your GP for an NHS vid doc app?

The Sun – GP APP UNFAIR NHS video consultation app is ‘unfairly cherry-picking healthier patients’, top GP claims

The Guardian – Smartphone GP service ‘risks luring doctors from frontline practice’

Many more articles from the mainstream press can be found via Google News


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