2016/17 contract changes reminder

This page is a reminder the headline changes to the 2016/17 GP contract. A longer briefing was circulated in March before the contract came into effect, if you would like a more detailed summary.

Contract Uplift and Expenses

The GPC has negotiated an investment of £220 million into the GP Contract for 2016/17, representing an approximately 3.2% overall uplift, the largest for some years. This includes an absolute 1% increase in contract value, but, additionally, contributions towards the rising costs of medical indemnity, national insurance and superannuation, CQC fees, and utility and other costs. The 1% uplift will be subject to the current 5.34% OOHS deduction, but the monies supporting expenses reimbursements will not.

Vaccinations and Immunisations

The current item of service fee paid for all immunisations and vaccinations will rise from £7.64 to £9.80, an increase of 28%.

All other immunisation programmes remain the same, except: 

  • The catch-up element of the Meningococcal B programme and the delivery of paracetamol are being withdrawn.
  • The infant dose of Men. C will be withdrawn from the Childhood Immunisation Programme from April 2016.
  • The Men. ACWY programme is to be extended to allow for the opportunistic vaccination of non-fresher 19-25 year olds.

QOF

There are no changes at all to QOF, in terms of indicators or thresholds for 2016/17. The QOF point value in 2016/17 will be £165.18. This is not a real uplift; it simply takes into account the changes in Contractor Population Index (CPI) as a result of the growth in average practice list size and also the overall population.

Direct Enhanced Services

The Dementia Direct Enhanced Services (DES) will end on March 2016 and the associated funding (approximately £42 million) will be transferred to Global Sum (and GSE) without the out-of-hours deduction being applied.

Dementia diagnosis rates will continue to be monitored, as this remains an important political and health priority within England.

All other DESs will continue, including the Extended Hours DES for a further year, with no change in specification or funding.

This includes the AUA (Avoiding Unplanned Admissions) DES, about which there are considerable concerns over the bureaucratic burden it represents, together with its usefulness. Although GPC would have liked to negotiate the end of this DES for 2016/17, and was unsuccessful in this, there is a commitment to discuss this outcome with NHS Employers for 2017/18.

Access Survey

Each practice will have to provide six monthly data on the local availability of routine evening and weekend GP appointments for their registered patients. This will include appointments available at sites other than the practice itself, and there is no requirement for practices to offer such appointments unless via other contractual means, such as the Extended Hours DES. The exact form of this data return is to be agreed. This constitutes the only new workload for practices within the 2016/17 Agreement.

Extraction of Former QOF and Enhanced Services data

As QOF indicators (and DESs) have been retired, there has been pressure on practices to continue to allow extraction of such data under the HSCIC Indicators No Longer in QOF (INLIQ) service. The 2016/17 Agreement encourages practices to make this data available.

Last updated : 25 May 2016

 

Londonwide LMCs conference 2019 round-up (19 Mar 2019)

On 12 March 2019 we hosted our annual conference – titled “All Together Now” - at the Kia Oval. The day was a great success with an array of guest...
Read more »

New ICO advice on handling Subject Access Requests (19 Mar 2019)

The Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) have recently released a blog containing further advice for GPs and practices on the right of access for patients, commonly called Subject Access Requests (SARs)....
Read more »

Londonwide LMCs’ board changes (15 Mar 2019)

Following elections we would like to welcome Dr Anouska Hari (NW) and Dr Naureen Bhatti (NC/NE) to the board.  Dr Marek Jarzembowski (South), Dr Robbie Bunt (NC/NE), Dr Simon Parton...
Read more »

New BMA locum template terms and conditions (13 Mar 2019)

The BMA GPC and sessional subcommittee have jointly produced model terms of engagement for locum GPs, which they recommend both practices and locums should proactively adopt. It should be noted that...
Read more »

Tips of the month February 2019 (19 Feb 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 »

QOF business rules coding issues – update for practice teams (19 Feb 2019)

Please note that no action is currently needed by practices on this matter, but you should read the information carefully. Following the introduction of the SNOMED-CT coding in 2018/19, NHS...
Read more »

Type 2 opt-outs replaced by the national data opt-out (19 Feb 2019)

Type 2 opt-outs have been replaced by the national data opt-out so practices must no longer use the type 2 opt-out code to record a patient's opt-out choice as it...
Read more »

The Data Security and Protection Toolkit (DSPT) – further guidance now available (19 Feb 2019)

The The Data Security and Protection Toolkit (DSPT) replaced the Information Governance toolkit from April 2018. The DSPT is an online self-assessment toolkit that has to be used by all...
Read more »
Next Page »
« Previous Page