Help us respond to the Health and Social Care Select Committee enquiry into ‘The Future of General Practice’

We will be responding to this new inquiry as on behalf of London general practice and would welcome your views. We will highlight London GP teams’ commitment to patient access, timely care, and the need for practices and teams to be enabled and resourced to work safely. We would welcome your thoughts on any targeted bureaucratic/ clinical/ system barriers which are complicating or obstructing the delivery of safe and timely GP care which could be raised in our response.

MPs will examine challenges facing general practice in the NHS over the next five years. The new inquiry into the future of general practice will consider access to services and the impact of changes introduced during the pandemic such as online or virtual consultations. Barriers to accessing services and the extent to which the Government and NHS England’s plans will address these issues will also be considered. Regional variation in general practice, the general practice workload, and the partnership model of general practice will also be explored.  

Select Committee Chair, and former Secretary of State for Health, Rt Hon Jeremy Hunt MP launched the Inquiry last week, saying: “General Practice is in crisis now with an utterly exhausted and demoralised workforce and patients increasingly uncertain of what they can expect. Yet it remains the beating heart of the NHS and essential to the prevention agenda - so how do we get there? This will be one of our most important inquiries of the coming year.” 

The Committee have issued a call for evidence and the terms of reference can be seen below: 

Terms of reference: 

The Committee invites written submissions addressing any, or all, of the following points:  

  • What are the main barriers to accessing general practice and how can these be tackled? 
  • To what extent does the Government and NHS England’s plan for improving access for patients and supporting general practice address these barriers?
  • What are the impacts when patients are unable to access general practice using their preferred method?  
  • What role does having a named GP—and being able to see that GP—play in providing patients with the continuity of care they need? 
  • What are the main challenges facing general practice in the next 5 years?
  • How does regional variation shape the challenges facing general practice in different parts of England, including rural areas?
  • What part should general practice play in the prevention agenda?
  • What can be done to reduce bureaucracy and burnout, and improve morale, in general practice? 
  • How can the current model of general practice be improved to make it more sustainable in the long term? In particular:
  • Is the traditional partnership model in general practice sustainable given recruitment challenges, the prioritisation of integrated care and the shift towards salaried GP posts?
  • Do the current contracting and payment systems in general practice encourage proactive, personalised, coordinated and integrated care?
  • Has the development of Primary Care Networks improved the delivery of proactive, personalised, coordinated and integrated care and reduced the administrative burden on GPs?
  • To what extent has general practice been able to work in effective partnerships with other professions within primary care and beyond to free more GP time for patient care?

Written evidence should be submitted here by Tuesday 14 December, with no more than 3,000 words per submission.

Please consider sharing any directly submitted evidence with us to inform the Londonwide LMCs’ response. 

Last updated : 21 Jan 2022

 

New CQC guidance section for practices (20 Aug 2019)

In the past 12 months CQC have visited nearly 400 practices in London and found that: 3 were considered outstanding, 300 were considered ‘good’, 57 required improvement, and 23...
Read more »

Bowel screening update – August 2019 (20 Aug 2019)

NHS England have provided an information sheet to explain the introduction of the faecal immunochemical test (FIT). This replaced the guaiac faecal occult blood test (gFOBt) at the start of...
Read more »

Tackling social isolation and loneliness to improve health (20 Aug 2019)

Colin Brown, UK Director for Independent Living & Crisis Response at British Red Cross looks at how their expertise will be of use to social prescribing link workers, as they...
Read more »

Primary care buddying system (20 Aug 2019)

The NHS London Leadership Academy is working with primary care providers to support development in the sector, and to facilitate wider working across the health and social care system. They...
Read more »

Vaccination update August 2019 (20 Aug 2019)

Hepatitis B in at risk babies Babies born to mothers infected with hepatitis B require a course of hep B vaccination. The first dose is given within 24 hours in...
Read more »

Londonwide LMCs’ support for Primary Care Network Clinical Directors (20 Aug 2019)

The introduction of the PCN DES means significant changes in the way practices deliver some existing services, and the rolling out of a new range of services. Londonwide LMCs is...
Read more »

Safeguarding payments and collaborative arrangements (15 Aug 2019)

On 11 July 2019 Dr David Geddes, NHSE/I Director of Primary Care Commissioning, wrote to CCGs and STPs advising that payment for safeguarding activity is not covered by core NHS...
Read more »

Tips of the month August 2019 (15 Aug 2019)

We provide weekly tips based on common queries which come through to us from London GPs and practice teams. These are shared via social media and collated for...
Read more »

Congratulations to Dr Katie Bramall-Stainer on becoming CEO of Cambridgeshire LMCs (15 Aug 2019)

At the start of August Dr Katie Bramall-Stainer took over from Dr Guy Watkins as Chief Executive of Cambridgeshire LMC. Katie trained as a GP in London and was previously a medical...
Read more »

CNSGP confirmed to cover safeguarding reports (13 Aug 2019)

NHS England and NHS Resolution have confirmed that the Clinical Negligence Scheme for General Practice (CNSGP) does cover GPs for claims relating to reports produced in response to safeguarding requests, for...
Read more »
Next Page »
« Previous Page