Daily Mail

GPs ordered to slash referrals to hospitals

They’ll need approval from a medical panel

- By Rosie Taylor

GPs will not be able to send patients to hospital without permission from a panel of other doctors under a controvers­ial plan to slash costs.

The NHS is rolling out a scheme that requires all family doctors in England to seek approval from a medical panel for all nonurgent hospital referrals.

It covers GP requests for procedures including hip and knee surgery, cataract removals, X-rays and scans.

If the panel disagrees with a request, the patient is refused a hospital appointmen­t.

The so- called ‘peer review’ scheme is being expanded nationwide from next week following a pilot in two regions in the North East.

According to a memo leaked to Pulse magazine, NHS England has told all health trusts to ensure they carry out weekly reviews of referrals from GPs ‘by September’.

It suggests the Government is offering financial incentives to trusts to set up the schemes, which aim to slash referrals by 30 per cent.

Last night, NHS England said peer reviews were a simple way for GPs to support each other and to spare patients from making unnecessar­y trips to hospital.

But critics warned the move could put patients at risk and Warning: Dr Andrew Green delay essential treatment. Often patients sent for nonurgent tests are later discovered to have life-threatenin­g conditions, including cancer and heart problems.

And GPs warned it could put more pressure on overstretc­hed practices, create more bureaucrac­y and even undermine trust between doctors and patients.

Joyce Robins, of Patient Concern, said the plan was ‘a dreadful idea’.

She added: ‘The whole point of a family doctor is that they know their patients. A doctor knows if the patient sitting in front of them really needs to be referred or not. I’m sure [NHS England] is trying to cut down the number of people who go to hospital, and that’s understand­able, but putting the review decision to a group of people who don’t know the patient is not the right way to practise medicine.’

The pilot schemes were introduced in Hartlepool and Stockton- on-Tees, and Darlington Clinical Commission­ing Groups (CCGs). GPs were made to submit non-urgent referrals to a panel of family doctors who had no knowledge of the patient involved, nor access to their notes.

Each case was assessed over two days and approved or sent back to the GP with a suggestion of other treatments. GPs could appeal the decision, but this added to the delay in the patient getting treatment.

According to Pulse, the plan is set for a nationwide rollout. It quoted an NHS England report as saying: ‘Significan­t additional funding is being given to regional teams in 2017/18 to roll out and spread interventi­ons and schemes that will help CCGs to deliver a slower growth in referrals.’

The NHS document reportedly stated that good practice would be for GPs to review each other’s new referrals, at least once a week, to ensure that ‘all options are explored and that patients are seen and treated in the right place, at the right time and as quickly as possible’.

Professor Martin Marshall, vice- chairman of the Royal College of GPs, said that while reviewing referrals could be a ‘constructi­ve part of general practice’, he was worried if the aim of the initiative was to save money.

‘There is little or no evidence that referral management schemes are cost effective and they can damage patient care,’ he said. ‘Our concern is that these schemes can undermine the important trust between GP and patient – and if decisions are being made about patients in the absence of their full clinical records, we do have concerns about patient safety.’

Professor Azeem Majeed, professor of primary care at Imperial College London, said asking doctors with no knowledge of the patient to assess whether they should go to hospital could cause unnecessar­y delays. He told Pulse: ‘To be carried out effectivel­y, clinical peer review requires adequate time and resources.

‘Given the current pressures on NHS general practice in England, this scheme may well end up as a tick-box exercise rather than something that will improve patient outcomes and NHS efficiency.’

Dr Andrew Green, of the British Medical Associatio­n’s general practition­ers committee, warned forcing GPs to have an hourly meeting once a week on referrals would be equivalent to removing 1,000 GPs from the health service.

NHS England said peer reviews were ‘a simple way’ to help patients get the best care. It said each region would be responsibl­e for establishi­ng its own scheme.

‘Patient safety concerns’

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