Friends and Family Test - act now to avoid a breach notice
We are aware that there may be some confusion about the data required for the Friends and Family Test (FFT).
NHS England data on the monthly returns show that many practices have not submitted information regularly, and some, not since it was introduced.
It is a contractual requirement for practices to carry out the FFT and submit data each month. A minimum of five responses is required by NHS England.
Please remember that if you do not submit FFT data monthly for three consecutive months you will be in breach of your contract and risk having a breach notice issued to you.
Please note the FFT is not a one-off exercise. It is an ongoing commitment that is written into your practice contract. Monthly submissions of the data you collect from FFT must be submitted on the 12th working day in the month after the data is collected.
The data for AUGUST 2015 data is due on Wednesday 16 September 2015.
If you are one of the practices that has NOT submitted data, you are advised to address this and examine the reasons why. Practices may not have submitted the required data because:
- Practices only have one person entering data into CQRS (Calculating Quality Reporting Services) (and no one has been doing it while this person is on holiday or off sick).
- Practices thought this was only a short term exercise, so entered for a period then stopped.
- CQRS did not work as intended, ie, instead of showing January 2015 first it brought up January 2016.
- Some practices are part of community services and should not have been on the submitters list (NHS England are now identifying them and removing them).
- Some practices have a restricted patient list thus feel FFT is not relevant to them.
- Data has been submitted after the submission date and therefore does not count.
- Data was collected over several months and submitted all at once.
- No data was collected so a submission was not felt to be necessary.
- There may also be practices deliberately not submitting information.
Londonwide LMCs' advice:
- Have a reliable, fool proof process in place that ensures the data for FFT is uploaded monthly and most critically does not rely on one person.
- Educate the members of staff responsible for the monthly upload on how to do this via CQRS (see our August 2015 newsletter for further information).
- Be aware the data needs to be submitted monthly on the 12th working day after the month in question.
- Even if you have no responses a submission still needs to be uploaded on a monthly basis.
- Do not collect FFT returns for months and submit them all at once. The data needs to be spread out and submitted month by month.
- Be aware of the deadlines for data submission. If you miss the deadline, your data will not count and you will be classed as a non-submitter.
- All practices, whatever their patient list, must collect and submit FFT data.
- If you do not submit data for three months NHSE can issue you with a breach notice.
- Aim to submit at least 10 FFT patient/carer responses a month - less than five responses will be classed as "no data" by NHSE.
FFT submission dates for the rest of the year are:
- Friday 16 October for September data
- Tuesday 17 November for October data
- Wednesday 16 December for November data
- Tuesday 19 January 2016 for December 2015 data
For further help and advice please contact Julie Sharman at Londonwide LMCs on Julie.Sharman@lmc.org.uk.
Last updated : 17 Sep 2015GP State of Emergency success: TFL change fees advice (16 Jul 2018)
Following a letter from our GP State of Emergency team, Transport for London have updated their advice to applying for a private hire driver licence to reflect that the charge...Dr Michelle Drage's statement on the new Secretary of State for Health and Social Care (10 Jul 2018)
Dr Michelle Drage responds to the appointment of Matthew Hancock as Secretary of State for Health and Social Care. "Congratulations and welcome to new Health Secretary Matthew Hancock. "I’d love...Perinatal mental health access variation (06 Jul 2018)
The Pan-London Perinatal Mental Health Network are gathering information on disparities in access to, and funding for, perinatal mental health within secondary and tertiary care. This map produced by the...Salisbury Novichok 1 incident - Public Health England interim guidance (05 Jul 2018)
Following the recent Salisbury Novichok 1 incident, Public Health England have issued interim guidance on the diagnosis and early management in organophosphate chemical incidents. This guidance can be downloadedLondonwide LMCs' June 2018 newsletter (20 Jun 2018)
...Tips of the month June 2018 (20 Jun 2018)
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...Free online mindfulness course for patients (19 Jun 2018)
Londoners can now access a free online mindfulness tool via the Good Thinking website. The website signposts individuals to resources to help deal with depression, anxiety, stress and insomnia...GP State of Emergency continues (19 Jun 2018)
Since April 2016 when GPs in London and across the country declared a GP State of Emergency, our campaign has been a great success. However, we recognise that the...SNOMED CT update for SystmOne practices (19 Jun 2018)
The first phase of the national deployment of SNOMED CT has now taken place with approximately 20 pilot sites taking part. The wider roll-out for SystmOne GP practices will be...Publication of Integrated Care - Organisations, Partnerships and Systems (19 Jun 2018)
Online report PDF download The Committee considered the increasing reliance on a range of health and care services, which are mostly...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.