The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

New courses designed to boost GP numbers

Scottish Government to fund 85 additional places to help address shortage of family doctors

- Laura Paterson

New university courses are being introduced in a bid to boost GP numbers.

The Scottish Government will fund 85 additional places at Scottish universiti­es to help reach its aim of increasing the number of GPs by 800 over the next decade.

Edinburgh University will offer 25 places to NHS healthcare profession­als who want to retrain as doctors, which it said were hoped to address “doctor shortages”.

The five-year course, said to be the first of its kind in the UK, will be part-time and largely online for the first three years, enabling participan­ts to continue working in their current role as they study.

Glasgow and Aberdeen universiti­es will offer 30 places each on new courses with a greater focus on general practice.

A total of 60 places come into force in 2019/20 with 25 more starting in 2020/21, increasing the number of medical places at Scottish universiti­es to a record 1,038.

“The courses will include more involvemen­t of GPs in teaching and assessment and enhanced GP placements in deprived and rural settings. SHONA ROBISON, HEALTH SECRETARY

The move comes as doctors’ organisati­ons warn of a GP shortage and Scottish Government statistics published in March showed a “continued decrease” in the number of GPs working full-time – with this having fallen from 51% in 2013 to 37% last year.

Health secretary Shona Robison said: “The innovative proposals from Aberdeen, Edinburgh and Glasgow universiti­es will see 85 new places to specifical­ly promote general practice as a long-term career for young doctors and allow experience­d healthcare profession­als who may be interested in becoming doctors to enter medicine.

“The courses will include more involvemen­t of GPs in teaching and assessment and enhanced GP placements in deprived and rural settings.

“While our new GP contract will make general practice a more attractive career by cutting workloads and giving doctors more time with patients, these new medical places are a further step we are taking to train and retain more family doctors in Scotland.”

Professor Moira Whyte, head of Edinburgh University’s College of Medicine, said: “We are delighted to have been awarded places for this innovative programme in medical education – a first in the UK.

“By combining new technologi­es and traditiona­l medical teaching in general practice and hospital settings, we hope to reduce barriers that have previously deterred people from moving between health profession­s.

“We expect the scheme will make an important contributi­on to addressing doctor shortages across Scotland.”

 ??  ?? Health secretary Shona Robison wants more doctors to see general practice as a long-term career.
Health secretary Shona Robison wants more doctors to see general practice as a long-term career.

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