Digital first consultation response

We have responded to NHS England’s consultation on ‘Digital-first primary care and its implications for general practice payments’. Our full response can be read here, a summary is below.

Response to proposed contractual changes

  • The London adjustment should be retained, and in particular practices based on the peripheries of London should receive the adjustment for all patients, regardless of whether they reside in a London borough or a neighbouring county.
  • The London adjustment should be retained for patients registered “normally” but residing across administrative or postcode boundaries. In particular, practices based on the peripheries of London should receive the adjustment for all patients, regardless of whether they reside in a London borough or a neighbouring county. Clarity is needed on whether the proposals distinguish between patients registered in a practice’s delivery area, for whom there is an obligation to visit should the need arise, and those registered as “out of area”, such as commuters previously registered to their home-based practice and living beyond existing practice boundaries, for whom there is no obligation to visit. 

How to implement greater digital first provision in general practice

  • Online access and consulting could reduce the need for attendance at GP practices and appointments in the long-term. How to apply the technology in ways which actually do this needs to be established by rigorous evaluation, rather than the belief that rolling out more online services will somehow inherently reduce workload.
  • To create a reliable online service the NHS needs to fund user research (both patient and clinical), significant IT infrastructure investment and improvements in practices, software development and/or procurement, training and roll-out support.
  • In order for investment in digital health tools to fit with the values of general practice, such tools must directly reduce health inequalities, or free up resource which can be directed to other methods of care delivery which are proven to do so.
  • Money should not be diverted from elsewhere in general practice to pay for new digital services.
Last updated : 21 Nov 2018

 

LMC satisfaction survey February 2019 (19 Feb 2019)

All GPs, practice managers and nurses should have received a link to complete our LMC satisfaction survey. If you have not yet filled it in, the link to complete it...
Read more »

Pensions: what you need to check before the end of March (19 Feb 2019)

Pensions advisor, Ian McNicholl of ISM Pension Services, shares his top tips on what you need to do to prepare for the end of the financial year. Ian will be...
Read more »

December 2018 workforce survey results (19 Feb 2019)

Thank you for supporting our December 2018 Workforce Survey. We had a fantastic response from 397 unique practices across the 1,227 practices we represent in the Capital. That is the...
Read more »

EU Exit Planning: Non-Clinical Goods and Services (19 Feb 2019)

Thank you for responding to our recent survey on practice needs in the event of a no-deal Brexit. We rely on your input.Following a discussion at our Annual General...
Read more »

GPC regional elections 2019 (14 Feb 2019)

Nominations are open for the round of GPC regional elections to cover terms from 2019-22. In London the constituency covering Barking & Havering, Redbridge & Waltham Forest, City & East London...
Read more »

Type 2 opt-outs replaced by the national data opt-out (07 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 »

QOF business rules coding issues – update for practice teams (06 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 »
Next Page »
« Previous Page