NHS England asking practices to complete its records on possible patient harm due to correspondence lost by Shared Business Services.

NHS England are say 30% of practices in England have yet to respond to their request to provide details of whether any patients may have come to harm due to the loss of correspondence by NHS Shared Business Services. Practices will be paid for the time spent checking their records, those who complete the exercise in March and May should expect payment by the end of September if they have not already received it.

NHS England have passed details of the practices who have yet to respond to their heads of primary care and to clinical commissioning groups. All practices should respond, even if just to say that they do not believe any patients may have come to harm. The initial ask for information went to practices in December 2016, with further communications in March and May 2017.

NHS England say that all cases of potential harm are now being reviewed by their GP national Clinical Directors to confirm whether further clinical review is required. They are contacting practices to obtain patient details and can offer practices support if required. They also have the option of asking local area teams to assist with providing information in recognition of workload placed on practices.

The dedicated phone line and email address for the incident team are 0800 028 9723 and england.sbsincident@nhs.net.

Last updated : 08 Sep 2017

 

Extended hours DES update (23 Oct 2017)

The 2017/18 changes to the GP contract included the condition that meant practices who regularly close for a half day, on a weekly basis, will not ordinarily qualify to deliver...
Read more »

Identifying patients living with frailty (23 Oct 2017)

Since July 2017 there has been a new contractual requirement for practices to focus on the identification and management of patients living with frailty. Practices are required to use appropriate...
Read more »

Remember that your practice needs a CQC registered manager (23 Oct 2017)

Remember that Section 33 of the Health and Social Care Act 2008 states that it is a legal requirement for practices to have a registered manager with the CQC (Care...
Read more »

New GMS1 form - use now (23 Oct 2017)

All practices should have received new GMS1 forms to use from this month onwards. The new forms include supplementary questions to be completed by overseas...
Read more »

LMC patient engagement project wins award at RCGP conference (19 Oct 2017)

Londonwide LMCs’ Patient Engagement Project (PEP) was launched in July 2016 with a focus on supporting practices in fostering and developing Patient Participation Groups (PPGs). The experiences and views of...
Read more »

Working as a team helps combat workload stress (19 Oct 2017)

Alison Dalal, practice manager at the Paddington Green Health Centre, shares her top tips. As surveys show, working in general practice can be a stressful business and as the workload...
Read more »

Jeremy Hunt pledges ‘state-backed’ indemnity (19 Oct 2017)

Speaking at this month’s Royal College of General Practitioners conference Jeremy Hunt announced he is planning to introduce a state-backed indemnity scheme from April 2019. It will cover all GPs...
Read more »

NHS chief says networking may be answer to working at scale (19 Oct 2017)

NHS Chief Executive Simon Stevens told the Health Select Committee earlier this month that “more networked approaches” can also be an answer to working ‘at scale’. This places the NHS...
Read more »

BMA issues advice on premises fees (20 Sep 2017)

As NHS Property Services emails practices with invoices and/or a letter from Mark Day, Chief Financial Officer at Community Health Partnerships the BMA has issued advice to practices. The covering...
Read more »
Next Page »
« Previous Page