Perthshire Advertiser

Initiative to recruit rural GPs

- ROBBIE CHALMERS

An ambitious initiative to help resolve the long- standing p roblem of GP recruitmen­t in some of Scotland’s more remote and rural areas is being extended to NHS Tayside.

The scheme, ‘Rediscover the Joy of General Practice’, was set up in 2018 to offer GPs fixed-term placements to practices in the areas covered by four health boards: NHS Shetland, Orkney, Western Isles and Highland.

It has proved a success and is now being adopted in NHS Tayside, as well as NHS Grampian and NHS Dumfries and Galloway.

Since its launch the initiative has recruited two cohorts of general practition­ers, 33 in the first and 27 in the second.

Each group makes up a rural support team of GPs who commit themselves to placements to medical practices in remote and rural areas.

The GPs can choose how much they want to work, usually in blocks of one to four weeks.

The aim is to ease pressure on practices that have difficulty with long-term GP vacancies or with covering for absences or short-term leave.

The initiative was launched by the Scottish Rural Medicine Collaborat­ive, which was set up with Scottish Government funding to develop ways of improving GP recruitmen­t and retention in 10 health board areas, including Tayside, which serve rural communitie­s.

Chief executive of NHS Highland and chair of the collaborat­ive Pam Dudek said: “Our programme board was delighted at its recent meeting to endorse plans to spread ‘The Joy’ to other parts of the country. For a variety of reasons many GP practices have found it difficult to attract and keep doctors.

“Working in remote and rural areas isn’t necessaril­y for everybody but ‘The Joy’ is undoubtedl­y making it a much more attractive propositio­n.

“It has resulted in the creation of highly-motivated teams of experience­d GPs who are helping boards and practices to plug gaps that would have been hard to fill.

“It has been effective in the four original board areas and I am sure it will play a significan­t part in easing pressure on GP practices in Tayside, as well as Grampian and Dumfries and Galloway.”

Further details about the medical initiative can be found on the Scottish Rural Medicine Collaborat­ive’s website.

 ?? ?? Recruitmen­t The GPs can choose how much they want to work, usually in blocks of one to four weeks. Picture posed by models
Recruitmen­t The GPs can choose how much they want to work, usually in blocks of one to four weeks. Picture posed by models
 ?? ?? Taking a stand Pupils from Perth High School as well as Layla Riddoch, Trainee Youth Worker at YMCA
Taking a stand Pupils from Perth High School as well as Layla Riddoch, Trainee Youth Worker at YMCA

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