Speakers' Corner - Virginia Patania - Keys to unlocking time
General Practice has never moved at a faster pace than it is now. Simply keeping up can take so much effort that the ‘day job’ can feel either as if it’s getting in the way, or becoming a strong driver to avoid changing.
But here's the magic about the day job, if your day job is managing a practice; once you've put processes in place, the bulk of the work is done. The normal running of these processes carries joint ownership between everyone in the practice.
It's now March, and the pressure is mounting to hit end of year targets, close accounts, start new payrolls, and refresh information governance requirements. In my own borough (Tower Hamlets) the Care Quality Commission (CQC) continues to helpfully visit practices during this busy time, ensuring no stone is left unturned. And yet, I cannot shake the strong, empowering belief that, even in all this chaos, everything is still possible. That general practice is on the cusp of its greatest transformation, with every crisis comes an opportunity to drive innovation, and better, shared ways of working.
I am possibly not your traditional manager. On two days per week, I run a large, successful practice which was on the brink of closure just a few years ago. Meaning we've known our challenges. Yet despite my limited time, the months of March and February, in truth, don't feel very different from August or December. Of course, there are submissions to be made, boxes to be ticked, lists to chase, protocols to refresh. But ultimately, I am still the person who holds the keys that unlock my time.
My four keys are:
The first is take a whole-year calendar approach, which means that my calendar is about half-booked even as far as years down the line (with expiries and time for contract renegotiations). Submissions for 2017 are in my calendar - now. So I can work on and around these, and easily plan meetings and other pieces of work during the year based on the time I know I will have. This also helps me identify bigger projects and spread them throughout the year, knowing that "crunch time" is not generally something I need to work around.
The second thing I do - and doing this is the exact opposite of obvious - is actually follow the calendar. "Slipping" is not a habit, and my calendar entries are neither ambitions nor suggestions. I manage my bookings a bit like a clinical triage, multiplying time (how long has the task been in my diary) by urgency. In this way, if reviewing a protocol has been in my diary for 9 months, an important but not life-changing meeting won't wipe this off my calendar. A three day notice window to apply for funds to restructure our premises, however, will. And the routine task will slip to the next available slot.
The third thing I do is to be mindful of Hofstadter's law - meaning it's difficult, if not impossible, to accurately estimate the time it takes to complete complex tasks. So every task in my diary is planned within a buffer of just a little too much time.
Lastly, I delegate. I delegate like it's nobody's business. Imagine a traditional manager's job description. Imagine chopping it into pieces and then distributing the pieces to everyone in the practice, making someone in charge of HR, someone in charge of premises, someone else of IT... You get the idea. Then re-write that job description in one line: coordinate everyone's duties, and provide mindful direction.
This approach means three things:
- general practice has relatively limited scope for creative career progression, but now staff will have a fair crack at a challenging, stretching piece of work;
- partners and clinicians will have more skin in the game when thinking about the management of their own practice;
- the manager will be allowed sufficient space and resource to do what actually needs to be done: developing strategy and focusing on continuous quality improvement. Doing the job, and then doing it better. Regardless of what month in the year it happens to be.
NHS delivery plan for tackling the Covid-19 backlog of care (22 Feb 2022)
The long-awaited NHS elective recovery plan was published in full earlier this month and sets out plans to tackle England’s elective care backlog over the next three years. The...Contacting patients with BT phone lines and ‘Call Protect’ (22 Feb 2022)
Patients with a BT landline may be knowingly or unknowingly opted into a service called ‘Call Protect’ which prevents some practice phone systems calling them properly. Affected practices will find...COPI Notices extended for a further three months until 30 June 2022 (22 Feb 2022)
Simon Madden, Director of Data Policy at NHSX ,on behalf of the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, notified GP practices on 10 February 2022 that the COPI...End of free Covid-19 testing and mandatory self-isolation (22 Feb 2022)
On 21 February the Prime Minister announced the end of Covid restrictions and most support measures. Including: From 24 February people who test positive for Covid-19 will no longer...General practice issues in Parliament - February 2022 (21 Feb 2022)
For our February 2022 newsletter we round up recent activity happening in Westminster that affects general practice. Local councillors on Integrated Care Boards On the 9 February, Lord Kamall, Parliamentary...Mayor’s research – registering patients without proof of address or ID (21 Feb 2022)
The Greater London Authority, on behalf of the Mayor of London, is urgently seeking participants for research into barriers faced by GP surgeries when registering new patients without proof of...5–11-year-old Covid-19 vaccination (21 Feb 2022)
NHS England has confirmed the eligibility of this new cohort, saying that they expect primary care networks to vaccinate at-risk 5-11 year olds and community pharmacy to be the primary...Owning your practice premises - the essentials, February 2022 (03 Feb 2022)
Thursday 24 February 2022: 1.30pm to 4.30pm £95 per delegate for Londonwide practices £120 per delegate for practices from other areas This workshop is ideal for practices whose...Vaccination as Condition of Deployment (VCOD) measures set to be cancelled (01 Feb 2022)
Regulations requiring healthcare workers to be fully vaccinated by 1 April should no longer be applied, the Health Secretary Rt Hon Sajid Javid MP announced to Parliament on the evening...Waltham Forest LMC news update (31 Jan 2022)
Please click here to read the latest Waltham Forest LMC news update.Guidance
We provide expert guidance for practices in our guidance section, as well as an archive of other materials you may find useful.
GP Support
Contact our GP Support team if you need help or advice.
The team provide professional and pastoral support to GPs and practice teams on a broad range of issues.