Portsmouth News

City has most patients per GP

- Richard Lemmer richard.lemmer@jpress.co.uk

A SHORTAGE of doctors has seen Portsmouth have the worst rate of patients to GPs in the entire country, new figures have revealed.

According to figures from healthcare charity The Nuffield Trust, the Portsmouth Clinical Commission­ing Group (CCG) area has 2,483 patients for every GP.

It leaves Portsmouth at the bottom of the board when it comes to patients per GP.

Hull CCG is only slightly better with 2,481 patients for every GP, while Liverpool CCG performs best nationally with a GP for every 1,333 patients.

It comes as demand for doctors’ appointmen­ts has risen sharply over the course of the pandemic, according to Linda Stead, operations director for the GP-led Portsmouth Primary Care Alliance, which coordinate­s GP surgeries’ out of hours and home visiting services.

She said: ‘What I have noticed is how difficult it is to staff our shifts and how few GPs there are.

‘The demand, without any question, is rocketing. Our activity levels have gone up 25 per cent in the last year.

‘We are, without a shadow of a doubt, a lot busier and have been for a very long time.’

The University Surgery, in The Nuffield Centre, St Michael’s Road, is one of the busiest surgeries in the city, as it contends with 5,965 patients per GP – a total 17,498 patients and the full-time equivalent of 2.9 GPs.

A recruitmen­t drive to bring more GPs to the city is ‘absolutely’ needed, according to Linda.

She added: ‘We are looking at how we can become a very attractive employer and get people to come to the city.

‘My locum pool is very stable – once they work here, they want to stay and don’t want to go anywhere else.’

Portsmouth City Council leader Gerald Vernon-Jackson, a Liberal Democrat politician, said: ‘I have had a lot of people complain to me about not being able to get GP appointmen­ts.

‘We take this incredibly seriously but it’s a government issue and we need to know why there’s a postcode lottery for healthcare in this country. We are getting a rough deal in

Portsmouth.

‘Pharmacist­s in Scotland and Wales can issue prescripti­ons - could we be a pilot area for England?

‘Could we also look at the council directly employing GPs? This would mean they wouldn’t have to buy in to any practice partnershi­p, which may be more attractive to many.’

Cllr Winnington added: ‘We call on the government to support us with a national workforce plan, additional funding and greater support for trainees.’

The Portsmouth CCG is currently looking at a attracting a range of healthcare workers – including pharmacist­s, physiother­apists, nurses, occupation­al therapists and dieticians – to work in the city’s surgeries, according to Dr Linda Collie, Clinical Lead for the organisati­on.

Dr Collie said: ‘We’re introducin­g a number of other healthcare profession­als at GP practices to offer specialist support to patients, and working closely with the Portsmouth Primary Care Alliance to make the best use of our healthcare workforce across the city and attract more GPs to train and work in Portsmouth.’

 ?? ?? Portsmouth has fewer GPs per patient than any other part of the country
Portsmouth has fewer GPs per patient than any other part of the country

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