Daily Mail

35 patients a day, then turn away the rest, GPs urged

- By Kate Pickles Health Reporter

‘Dangerousl­y crude’

OVERWHELME­D family doctors should turn away patients once they have seen 35 in a day, GP leaders say, as anything higher is deemed ‘unsafe’.

The GPs’ union wants surgeries to be able to send patients to ‘overspill’ hubs when doctors hit that limit – similar to how hospitals can issue ‘black alerts’ to divert ambulances elsewhere when they are under extreme pressure.

The British Medical Associatio­n has called for the patient cap to be introduced as ‘overworked and undervalue­d’ doctors struggle to deal with an average of 41.5 consultati­ons a day. It claims that 25 is the optimal level, and that anything above 35 is unsafe.

But the idea has been branded ‘dangerousl­y crude’ by patients’ groups, which worry it will make the already scarce access to GP services even harder.

Patients are finding it increasing­ly difficult to get a routine appointmen­t, with many already having to wait three to four weeks before they can see a doctor. But GP surgeries are under huge strain from the rising and ageing population, with many more patients than before having treatment for complex illnesses.

They are also in the grip of a recruitmen­t crisis, with an exodus of family doctors who are retiring or quitting without being replaced by younger trainees.

Dr Richard Vautrey, the BMA’s GP committee chairman, said: ‘GP workloads have become increasing­ly unmanageab­le owing to the demands of more complex patient needs, widespread recruitmen­t issues, and years of underinves­tment – all of which takes a toll on GPs’ physical, mental and social health. There is an urgent need for cultural shift. Having a system of overworked and undervalue­d GPs is unsustaina­ble, and a change to safe working practices is vital to ensure the survival of general practice.’

According to a survey by GP magazine Pulse, doctors currently conduct an average 41.5 consultati­ons a day. The BMA, which represents 160,000 doctors and trainees, wants GPs to agree working limits which can then be enforced.

This could see local surgeries designate an ‘overspill’ centre that would take on patients when others are overstretc­hed. The BMA set out the proposal in a report, which states: ‘It will require a cultural change to remove the current noble but potentiall­y self-destructiv­e urge within general practice to simply work harder and longer to meet patients’ needs.’

But a spokesman for The Patients Associatio­n said: ‘Blanket decisions not to see patients above a fixed number would seem dangerousl­y crude, and guarantees cases of people not getting treatment and care at critical times, with serious consequenc­es for their health.’

The proposal comes as public satisfacti­on with GP services has dropped to the lowest level in 35 years, with a national survey claiming just 65 per cent were happy with their family doctor.

The Royal College of GPs said it has been advocating a warning system for some time and that a ‘black alert’ would be a lifeline to practition­ers.

Its chairman, Professor Helen Stokes-Lampard, said: ‘Hospitals have “black alerts” – they don’t use them when they don’t need to, they only use them when they can’t cope, to protect patient safety. We don’t have an equivalent in general practice, but we need one, as it is not safe for patients to be seen by fatigued doctors and their teams.’

An NHS England spokesman said: ‘While arbitrary caps on patient appointmen­ts would breach GPs’ contracts, we understand the pressures general practice is facing. That’s why the NHS is investing £2.4billion extra in GP services, growing the number of new doctors entering general practice and rolling out evening and weekend appointmen­ts to patients across England over this coming year.’

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