The Scotsman

Problems facing practices need more than contracts

The new GP contract does not offer a quick fix to a sector facing a crisis, says Andy Drane

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Earlier this month, GPS across Scotland voted in favour of accepting the new contract offered to them by the Scottish Government.

As an advisor supporting doctors’ practices on the many legal issues they must navigate, I have seen first-hand the unpreceden­ted crisis facing the sector. But will the new GP contract address this? It must tackle a range of issues including rising patient demand, stagnation in health outcomes, recruitmen­t challenges (especially in rural areas), and a major shortage of trainee GPS. These and other factors have resulted in many practices reducing services or even closing. there is an estimated shortfall of 800 GPS in the system.

Under the new agreement, GP practices will continue to operate as private businesses with the partners’ remunerati­on dependent on their level of profitabil­ity. Primary care has been run on this basis since its inception with most people within the NHS, including GPS, agreeing this model is the cheapest and most efficient means of delivering.

The new contract does offer some further government support by removing elements of the risk of running a business from gp practice partners, allowing them to focus more clearly on meeting patient needs. This includes greater support in managing areas such as practice premises and data protection. As well as making more funding available, the new GP contract also reinstates the principle that doctors are expert medical generalist­s supported by a raft of other healthcare profession­als who should therefore only focus on patients who actually need to be seen by them.

The new agreement seeks to deliver longer-term solutions to some core issues currently impacting on GPS, including the perception of many rurally-based practices that they are disadvanta­ged compared to counterpar­ts in urban areas. The proposed income guarantee within the new GP contract should provide some reassuranc­e. Many GPS in rural areas will, however, remain concerned that other health profession­als might not be available to pick up additional burdens they are no longer meant to be taking on board under the new terms.

The fact that the new GP contract promotes a longer-term journey rather than an immediate fix will present major challenges for the Scottish Government. While it has already been working on the structures and regulation­s which will underpin the new agreement, there is much to do before it comes into effect in April and it’s unlikely we will get a clearer picture until nearer the time. In the short term, the new deal won’t deliver the 800 new doctors currently required across Scotland. Indeed, the recruitmen­t crisis will unlikely be fixed for many years to come.

Issues around practice premises lease agreements and premises valuations will also continue. While the new GP contract pledges the NHS will take on all leased doctors’ surgeries as well as buy all owner-occupied premises by 2042, it will only take over those deemed to be ‘fit for purpose’. That means any practices based in an older building such as a traditiona­l townhouse will not qualify and could therefore struggle to recruit new partners due to concerns about future lease-related dilapidati­on costs as well as future values.

Additional­ly, health boards and health and social care partnershi­ps will apply the new GP contract and the support they are intended to provide in varying ways across the country, based on their own budgetary constraint­s.

The challenge for Scottish Government and BMA Scotland is to manage transition­al issues in a manner which prevents unanticipa­ted events from derailing the long term goal of the new GP contract. That leads to another issue; while the proposed GP contract arises out of a faultline between Scottish Government and doctors’ leaders, the crisis in the NHS is not just about lack of GPS. Addressing the recruitmen­t crisis in other health profession­s, including nursing, is also critical in making significan­t improvemen­ts to a creaking system.

While it is a forward-thinking proposal that will provide support in the longer term, including some clarity on key legal matters facing practices, the new GP contract does not offer a quick fix. Policy makers who think this will solve the immediate problems facing GP practices, as well as the wider NHS in Scotland, are in for a rude awakening. Andy Drane, partner, Davidson Chalmers

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