PCSE updates on contact details and pooled lists

Correct contact details

Practices can improve communications with PCSE by ensuring that they have the most up to date practice contact details, including:

  • The main practice contact
  • All user administrators
  • The designated Performers List approver
  • The designated GP Payments & Pensions (GPPP) approver

These may be the same person. However, providing PCSE with contact details for each role will improve communications. As a minimum, PCSE would like the name of a user administrator for each of the following key areas:

Area within the practice

Key contact

Suppliers & Logistics

Main Practice Contact

Performers List

PL Organisation Administrator

GP Pensions & Payments

GPPP Practice User Management

All user administrators will need to be verified by PCSE by completing a form and getting Caldicott Guardian approval, and PCSE’s User Registration Team will work with you through this process if required.

In many practices the user administrator for these three areas will be the practice manager, but in some practices the role will be split across two or three staff members. It is important that PCSE has the correct contact details and information on the lead area for each person.

The user administrator role has to be set up on the system by PCSE. Once this is in place the administrator can decide whether to create other roles within the practice to spread the workload and allow the development of a relationship with PCSE. Such roles include the Performers List organisation approver and a GP Payments & Pensions (GPPP) approver.

Below is a page from PCSE’s user management guidance showing the tasks that fall in each role:

A Performers List Organisation Approver – is the person (often the practice manager) in the practice who addresses changes that affect the Performers List. This could include a new partner joining, a partner retiring, or a GP taking 24-hour retirement. Read further information on PCSE and the Performers List.

More information for practice managers, or other personnel taking on the Performers List Approver role is here.

A GP Payments & Pensions (GPPP) approver – is the person in the practice who is responsible for all aspects of payment and pensions. This can include bank detail changes, childhood immunisation payments, practice mergers, pensions online enquiries etc.

Giving PCSE the name and contact details of a dedicated person within the practice will help them communicate more swiftly, particularly if forms have not been correctly completed or they have any queries.

For each area, the PCSE team want the name of one person they can direct all correspondence to. If you have not already supplied the contact details of your user administrator(s) and a PL organisation approver and/or GPPP approver to PCSE then please do so as soon as possible even if this person is already on their data base as ‘practice manager’, ‘lead clinician’ etc.

Further information on PCSE and the Performers List.

Further information on user management

Pooled lists

PCSE recommend that practices still operating personalised lists should consider moving to pooled ones. This subject was raised at a recent PCSE webinar, along with an eight-minute video on how to make the transition. The public questions and answers under the video may also be useful to practices.

Some of the benefits of having a pooled list are:

  • No need to bulk transfer patients when a GP joins or leaves the practice.
  • Practices can divide patients’ usual/named GP between salaried and partner GPs without notifiying PCSE.
  • Reduction in errors on GP links (as nothing can be sent to invalid GP codes).
Last updated : 16 Dec 2021

 

DHSC consultation on proposals to reform regulation of healthcare professionals (19 May 2021)

The Department for Health and Social Care is currently consulting on proposals to reform the regulation of healthcare professionals. In general terms there are a number of positive proposals, particularly...
Read more »

Proof of vaccination status for travel (18 May 2021)

Patients wishing to prove their Covid vaccination status can do so in two ways, neither of which require the involvement of their GP. The first way is by downloading the...
Read more »

Londonwide LMCs response to NHS England Publication B0497, 14 May 2021 (16 May 2021)

Yesterday evening NHS England issued a letter, which instructs practices to open their receptions for walk in triage and provide in-person appointments unless there is a “good clinical reason”...
Read more »

Shining a light on London’s exceptional general practice nurses (12 May 2021)

To celebrate International Nurses Day 2021, Kathryn Yates, our Director of Nursing asked people for across London general practice to ‘shine a light’ on the contributions of their nursing colleagues...
Read more »

Be ready for unprecedented times – 31 years in NHS nursing (11 May 2021)

Oluwafunmilayo Elizabeth Ayodeji is a Registered General Nurse, an Independent Prescriber and holds a BSC in Clinical Nursing. Elizabeth retired last week and has written this reflection on her time...
Read more »

Being a nurse in GP land during a global pandemic (11 May 2021)

Karen Landi is a GPN at the Speedwell Practice, North Finchley, Barnet. The Coronavirus pandemic has been very challenging at times, meaning we have had to learn to work in...
Read more »

LMC elections 2021 – nominations now open (28 Apr 2021)

Nominations for the 2021 LMC elections are now open. Only LMCs represent every GP practice in their area and every person working within each one. Standing for your LMC means...
Read more »

Covid vaccination guidance – April 2021 (28 Apr 2021)

New guidance issued over the last month largely relates to changes in advice around the use of the AstraZeneca vaccine, and licensing of the Moderna vaccine. AstraZeneca Lots of guidance...
Read more »

Provider selection consultation response (28 Apr 2021)

Londonwide LMCs recently responded to the NHS England consultation on changes to the procurement regime as set out in the recently published White Paper, including the circumstances under which ICS...
Read more »
Next Page »
« Previous Page