The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Health check for ‘vulnerable’ GP services across Tayside

‘At-risk’ rural practices to be investigat­ed as part of wide-ranging assessment

- JAMIE BUCHAN jabuchan@thecourier.co.uk

Health chiefs have launched a wide ranging review of “vulnerable” GP services across Tayside.

They want to avoid a repeat of a recent controvers­y in Bridge of Earn, Perthshire, where the village practice was forced to shut suddenly with more than 3,500 patients displaced.

Similar fears were raised about services in Methven last week – although officials have stressed the surgery there will not be closed.

Sir Lewis Ritchie, who previously led an independen­t assessment of NHS Tayside’s finances, has been brought on board to investigat­e a list of “at risk” rural practices.

It is part of a wider plan to “re-invigorate” the system, and could lead to mergers between services.

Chief executive Grant Archibald said: “We are carrying out a review of the events that compressed into the Bridge of Earn practice, so that we can learn from that experience.

“I have asked Dr Jane Bruce, associate medical director of primary care, to begin a review of practices elsewhere in Tayside, that might be vulnerable.

“These might be single-handed practices where an elderly GP is looking to retire, or it might be that there is an issue with the property.”

The list, which NHS Tayside has declined to make public, rates surgeries with a traffic light colour system, with red for those most at risk.

Sir Lewis will visit Bridge of Earn and other rural parts of the region to gather evidence for a GP sub-committee.

“The challenge is that we may need to look at GP practices coming together, or satellite services,” Mr Archibald said.

“We have been talking to Perth and Kinross Council chief executive Karen Reid about the co-location of services. For example, that could be a hub with social work as well as GP services.”

It has also emerged that an old nurses’ house in Bridge of Earn is being redevelope­d as a base for nursing staff.

“We may need to look at GP practices coming together. GRANT ARCHIBALD

An NHS Tayside spokeswoma­n said the Primary Care Service risk assessment project was still in its early stages.

“This work will help to identify GP practices which may be vulnerable or which may need support from NHS Tayside and builds on current practice to support practices to recruit and retain GPS and build wider multidisci­plinary teams,” she said.

“The informatio­n gathered will be used to inform discussion­s with the GP sub-committee and GPS about the future provision and sustainabi­lity of services across Tayside.”

 ?? Picture: Steve Macdougall. ?? A public meeting was held last week in Methven after fears were raised over GP services in the area but officials stressed the surgery will not close.
Picture: Steve Macdougall. A public meeting was held last week in Methven after fears were raised over GP services in the area but officials stressed the surgery will not close.

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