Daily Mail

JUST ONE GP COVERS HOME VISITS FOR 500,000 PATIENTS

- By Sophie Borland Health Editor

A single gP is having to cover night-time home visits for a population of half a million.

In a stark illustrati­on of the crisis in out- of-hours care, the doctor is solely responsibl­e for an area of 1,346 square miles. Ten years ago, eight GPs shared the workload in shropshire. The situation is blamed on lack of cash and a shortage of GPs prepared to carry out unsocial hours.

Cover is so poor that patients trying to see a doctor at evenings or weekends have been told to drive an hour over the border to get help in Wales. a mother of a sick child was offered consultati­ons an 80-mile round trip from her Ludlow home.

Dying cancer patients have been left in agony because there was no GP available to administer morphine.

and sources say on some nights there is no GP cover at all – a claim vehemently disputed by shropdoc, the firm charged with providing the service. In November, an out-of-hours

provider in Kent admitted that on one night it had only two doctors to look after 1. million patients.

Dr Richard Vautrey of the British Medical Associatio­n said too many providers were struggling to meet demand. ‘Their budgets have flatlined in the past decade and the number of cases requiring help is increasing,’ he added.

‘Many areas, particular­ly rural locations, are struggling to recruit GPs. If you are working longer hours during the day you may be less willing to do another four or six hours overnight.’

Professor Helen Stokes-Lampard of the Royal College of GPs said: ‘It is essential that any out-of-hours care services are staffed appropriat­ely to meet demand, and by sufficient numbers of appropriat­elytrained healthcare profession­als.

‘This is not the first time we have heard of situations where this may not be the case, and this must be addressed.’

The problems stem from a contract negotiated under Labour in 200 that allowed family doctors to opt out of responsibi­lity for patients at evenings and weekends.

Care was placed in the hands of commission­ing units which subcontrac­ted it to private firms and cooperativ­es – groups of doctors.

But in recent years GPs have become increasing­ly unwilling to do shifts. The fragmented state of out-of-hours care every night in Shropshire has led to a huge increase in patients going to A&E and dialling 999.

A board meeting of the Shrewsbury and Telford Hospitals trust two weeks ago was told casualty admissions were 13 per cent up on last winter and ambulances arrivals had increased by 17 per cent.

Although there is a second GP working at night carrying out ‘triage’ assessment­s on the phone they are not available to do consultati­ons or home visits. And this doctor is also responsibl­e for triaging incoming NHS 111 calls from Wales.

Shropdoc insists that patients can also be seen by one of two ‘urgent care practition­ers’ – who are either nurses or paramedics.

Freedom of informatio­n requests by the Mail show that out-of-hours provision is hugely patchy. In Milton Keynes, Bucks, there is one GP overnight for 290,000 patients, Cornwall has three GPs for 575,000 and Oldham has one for 230,000.

Dr Simon Chapple, medical director for Shropdoc, said that claims there was no doctor cover on some nights was ‘absolute rubbish’.

He said the service had been struggling to fill shifts due to an NHS scheme that sees surgeries offer appointmen­ts in the early evening and at weekends, taking GPs away from out-of-hours work.

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