Daily Mail

Now you can get a chemist to write out your sick note

Pharmacist­s and nurses at GPs’ clinics will be allowed to sign

- EXCLUSIVE By Shaun Wooller Health Correspond­ent

PHARMACIST­S and nurses will soon be given powers to issue sick notes under reforms that could free up millions of GP appointmen­ts.

The law will be changed so patients no longer need to see their family doctor to be signed off work from July 1.

The move is set to ease pressure on GPs and leave them with more time for sicker patients and those with complex issues.

It was not clear last night whether the new powers will apply to pharmacist­s in high street chains such as Boots or just to healthcare profession­als in GP surgeries.

The change comes amid record dissatisfa­ction with GP surgeries, with many patients frustrated over the struggle to get appointmen­ts to see doctors.

Last year GPs issued ten million ‘fit notes’, which have replaced sick notes, and they have been pushing the Government to change the rules so other healthcare profession­als can issue them.

They say the administra­tive burden adds to their workload, contribute­s to stress and stops them helping those in need.

Health Secretary Sajid Javid vowed to examine the issue in a bid to improve access to doctors and lobbied the Department for Work and Pensions to make the change.

Legislatio­n is expected to be laid before Parliament tomorrow, with the change

‘Help free up doctors’ time’

applicable to England, Scotland and Wales. It will mean that from next month nurses, occupation­al therapists, pharmacist­s and physiother­apists will be able to legally certify fit notes – something that at present only doctors can do.

The move is the most significan­t since the fit note’s introducti­on in 2010 and follows changes in April that allow for them to be certified and issued digitally, making the process more efficient for employees, employers and GPs.

Maria Caulfield, minister for patient safety and primary care, said the move ‘is another step towards helping to deliver an extra 50million appointmen­ts in general practice a year by 2024’. Fit notes are issued to patients after the first seven days of sickness absence.

The doctor can decide if the patient is ‘unfit for work’ or ‘may be fit for work’ subject to advice on adaptation­s to job role or workplace, for example.

Other healthcare profession­als will be expected to make the same assessment­s.

Dr Gary Howsam, of the Royal College of GPs, said allowing other healthcare profession­als to issue fit notes ‘should help free up GPs’ time to deliver patient care’.

He added: ‘It would also recognise the role of some members of the wider practice team in giving patients advice.

‘Whilst this would be a positive step in helping to reduce the bureaucrat­ic burden GPs face on a daily basis, ultimately the Government must take further action to address escalating workload in general practice and chronic workforce shortages.’

The plans were last night welcomed by patient groups.

Dennis Reed, of Silver Voices, which campaigns for the elderly, said: ‘This is a very welcome move that will hopefully free up GP time so they can see more patients.

‘Allowing other healthcare profession­als to issue fit notes is a great way to reduce the paperwork that GPs often complain about.

‘I hope this will relieve some of their burden and make it easier for patients who need to see a GP to actually see one.’

The announceme­nt comes after NHS Digital revealed stressed GPs are rushing through a fifth of appointmen­ts in five minutes or less. Eight in ten GPs fear patient safety is deteriorat­ing as they deal with an average of 46 appointmen­ts a day instead of the safe limit of 25, the Rebuild General Practice campaign says.

Speedy appointmen­ts raise the

‘Reduce the paperwork’

risk of doctors missing diseases and prescribin­g the wrong drugs.

GPs now care for 2,200 patients each as the NHS struggles to recruit enough family doctors to cope with soaring demand.

There are 3million more patients registered in England now than in June 2017 but the number of fully

qualified GPs has fallen by around 1,300 over this period.

A survey earlier this year revealed patients’ satisfacti­on with their GP surgery has plummeted to its lowest ever level.

n Sajid Javid has criticised the removal of the word ‘women’ from the NHS website on cervical, womb and ovarian cancers.

Ovarian cancer is now described on the site as affecting ‘the two organs that store the eggs needed to make babies’, adding: ‘Anyone with ovaries can get ovarian cancer, but it mostly affects those over 50.’

The Health Secretary said ‘common sense and the right language’ should be used and vowed to look into the changes, adding ‘biological sex’ was important to ensure people got the right treatment.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom