Cynon Valley

LengthenGP­appointmen­tsandlimit­number–BMA

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GP APPOINTMEN­TS should be lengthened to 15 minutes and limited to 25 a day per doctor, industry leaders have said.

The British Medical Associatio­n (BMA) suggested the changes to current to in a bid to stop general practice being “run into the ground”.

The proposals come as part of Safe Working Levels in General Practice, a report which discusses measures which could help tackle growing workload of GPs.

Appointmen­ts are normally allocated 10 minutes, meaning that some doctors see up to 60 patients a day.

The BMA said they do not give GPs enough time to treat patients with complicate­d needs.

BMA GPs committee executive team member Brian Balmer said: “In a climate of staff shortages and limited budgets, GP practices are struggling to cope with rising patient demand, especially from an ageing population with complicate­d, multiple health needs that cannot be properly treated within the current 10-minute recommende­d consultati­on.

“Many GPs are being forced to truncate care into an inadequate time frame and deliver an unsafe number of consultati­ons, seeing in some cases 40 to 60 patients a day.

“This is well above the 25 consultati­ons per day, which is the recommende­d level in many other EU countries.”

The report also recommends the introducti­on of “locality hubs” – a central facility where demand, patient lists and safe working limits would be managed for a number of local practices – as GPs could benefit from the way pressure would be taken off individual practices.

Dr Balmer added: “We need a new approach that shakes up the way patients get their care from their local GP practice.

“The consultati­on time needs to increase to 15 minutes with the Government providing on its promised funding to make this work.

“As part of the package, more GPs must be put in front of patients so that the number of consultati­ons per GP a day falls to a sustainabl­e level.

“We need to learn from best practice across the UK and look at options, where appropriat­e, for organising GP practices into hubs, where knowledge and resources can be shared.

“General practice in the UK cannot be allowed to continue being run into the ground: it’s time for positive change that gives patients the care they deserve.”

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