Article by Denis Campbell Health Correspondent The
Observer Sat March 22 2014
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The leader of Britain's
family doctors has warned that GP
services are "under severe threat of extinction" because they cannot
cope with the growing demand for care. Practices are forcing patients to endure
long waits for appointments, and allowing them too little time with their GP,
according to Dr Maureen Baker, who chairs the Royal College of GPs.
In an outspoken intervention, Baker claimed that allocating general practice
an ever smaller share of the NHS budget was foolish because GP
surgeries were "shoring up the rest of the NHS from collapse" by
relieving pressure on hospitals."General practice as we know it is under severe threat of extinction.
It is imploding faster than people realise and patients are already bearing the
brunt of the problem," said Baker, who demanded urgent action to reduce
"the huge and historic imbalance in funding".
She added: "For generations GPs have been the bedrock of the NHS and
provided excellent care for patients. But we can no longer guarantee a future
for general practice as our patients know it, rely on it – and love it."
Surgeries are responsible for about 90% of all patient contact, but general
practice only receives 8.39% of the UK's
overall NHS budget. That share has been falling since 2003-04, while hospitals
have been getting more, despite NHS leaders and ministers agreeing that growing
numbers of hospital services need to be delivered elsewhere.
"GPs are doing all they can, but we are being seriously crippled by a
toxic mix of increasing workloads and ever dwindling budgets, which is leaving
patients waiting too long for an appointment and not receiving the time or
attention they need and that GPs want to give them," said Baker.
She urged the governments in Westminster,
Edinburgh, Cardiff
and Belfast to ensure the NHS's 10,000 GP surgeries, staffed by the UK's
40,000 family doctors, get more money from next month and "wake up to the
critical state that general practice is now in". Without that, patients
would not get the care that they need and "if this doesn't happen, we have
grave concerns for the sustainability of the NHS", added Baker.
Six in 10 (62%) of Britons believe the number of consultations GPs do each
day is putting the standard of care they offer patients under threat, according
to a ComRes poll of 1,007 adults selected to
represent the whole population and commissioned by the RCGP.While 70% were able to book an appointment within the same week the last
time they tried, 28% could not. Worryingly, 40% were concerned about the effect
long waiting times would have on their health.
Andy Burnham, the shadow health secretary, said it was unacceptable that any
patient had to wait up to a week to see a GP. "This is putting patients at
risk and flies in the face of personal promises made by the prime minister.
David Cameron is presiding over a serious deterioration in the quality of
primary care," said Burnham.An NHS England spokesman said that the health service had increased the
amount going into GP services by a third in real terms since 2002-03. It was
giving England's 211 GP-led clinical commissioning groups £250m to provide new
primary care and community services and putting another £50m into helping
family doctors improve access , including by phone, email and video.
The Department of Health declined to respond directly to Baker's stark
warning. It recognised the vital job that GPs do, a spokesman said. "That
is why we have cut GPs' targets by more than a third to free up more time with
patients and are dramatically increasing trainees so that GP numbers continue
to grow faster than the population."
The RCGP says that the NHS needs another 10,000 GPs to provide timely access
and high-quality care because an ageing population and rising numbers of people
with long-term conditions are producing heavier demand for their services. The
coalition has responded by promising to increase the number of GP trainees from
40% of all newly qualified doctors leaving medical school to 50% by 2020.