Keeping true to our values while under pressure
Ahead of our annual conference: 'Under Pressure: stabilise, transform, and sustain general practice for London', Dr Michelle Drage takes a look at some of the challenges facing London general practice. If you are booked onto our conference you can hear Michelle expand on these themes in her keynote speech tomorrow, 27 April 2017.
The London challenge
London general practice faces an unprecedented challenge with the a shortage of GPs and practice staff facing growing demand. Every six months we survey London GP practices and the results consistently show they’re running on empty; 46% of practices responding to our latest workforce survey had a vacancy, 45% had at least one GP planning to retire in the next three years.
This workforce is treating more patients; by 2020 the population of London will be 9.2 million, up 500,000 on 2014. These patients are increasingly unhealthy, with multi-morbidity that was confined to people in their 60s and 70s, being seen in people in their forties and fifties. On top of this, London has numerous areas with high levels of economic deprivation and the accompanying social factors that drive ill health.
Any GP or practice nurse will tell you they see these factors at play day in, day out, in the lives of their colleagues and the people they care for. Research support this view as well, one study gives healthcare a meagre 15% role in determining population health outcomes, with health behaviour patterns (40%) and social circumstances and environmental exposure (45%) being the real drivers.
Triple Aim to Quadruple Aim
Our workforce can only meet these demands if we are valued ourselves and still get joy from their work. The Triple Aim is a theory by Don Berwick that says a successful healthcare system needs to simultaneously pursue three dimensions:
- Improving the health of populations
- Improving the individual experience of care
- Reducing the per capita cost of care
The Quadruple Aim, developed by Sikka, Morath and Leape, adds a fourth point to make these principles a better fit for modern primary care:
- Improving the work life of health care providers, including clinicians and staff.
In terms of what it means for the people working in these health systems, the Sikka et al say:
“There is an internal gut-check, that needs to be answered affirmatively by each worker each day:
- Am I treated with dignity and respect by everyone, everyday, by everyone I encounter, without regard to race, ethnicity, nationality, gender, religious belief, sexual orientation, title, pay grade or number of degrees?
- Do I have the things I need: education, training, tools, encouragement, financial support, so I can make a contribution this organisation that gives meaning to my life?
- Am I recognised and thanked for what I do?
If each individual in the workforce cannot answer affirmatively to these questions, the full potential to achieve patient safety, effective outcomes and lower costs is compromised.”
The value of coordinated community care
For years I’ve been making the case for investing in general practice and primary care as the answer to the health challenges created by our changing population, all the evidence suggests it is where the NHS can provide the best care in the most cost effective way:
- In June 2016 Simon Stevens, the Chief Executive of the NHS said that 40% of NHS activity is related to ‘modifiable health risk factors’ and it spends £16bn a year on direct medical costs of obesity and diabetes – diabetes can only be prevented by behaviour changes driven in the community.
- In 2015 the National Audit Office reported that a 1% increase in spending on community services is associated with a 3% reduction in the level of A&E attendance.
- In 2014 Deloitte, hardly the greatest friend of the small business, said £72m a year extra spent in general practice would save the NHS £1.9bn by 2020 in reduced A&E visits, hospital stays and ambulance call outs.
How we’ve been told to do it…
So we’ve been told to make general practice fit into the structures created by sustainability and transformation plans (STPs) and the Multispecialty Community Providers (MCPs), which look set to be the STP’s deliver vehicle for primary care. These ‘new models of care’ are led by political imperatives rather than evidence, general practice is being pushed into them with the stick of contract changes and pulled into them with carrot of additional funding streams, which are all-too alluring at a time when many surgeries are struggling to keep the lights on.
With this approach the ambition of providing care at scale results in the ‘at scale’ part taking up all the resource and the ‘providing care’ part coming in second place.
The values of general practice
General practice needs to transform in a way which keeps the values of general practice at the centre of how practices teams go about caring for their patients. These values are:
- The registered list - individuals and ‘practice’ population.
- Expert generalist care of the whole patient.
- The therapeutic relationship with a consultation as the irreducible essence of delivery.
- Based on the bio-psycho-social care, not a disease-focused model.
- Advocacy and confidentiality.
- Safe, effective long term and preventative care by promoting access to relationship continuity, balanced with timely episodic care.
- Needs based, taking into account the wider determinants of health and the inverse care law, compared to wants.
How we should be doing it…
Community based general practice, supported by properly funded social care services, is best positioned to make the early interventions that can prevent ill-health developing into life-long conditions. This is a system which addresses the ‘wider determinants of health’, behavioural and environmental factors which compound the existing health inequalities that Londoners face. This winter’s Health Select Committee report on A&E pressures identified traditional general practice as the way to manage demand, while being unconvinced by GPs in A&E or extended access pilots.
We need the right kind of care, in the right place, working across local authority or health service boundaries. That doesn’t come from forcing all these components into a system, it comes from allowing services to connect across boundaries and meet needs; GPs, community services, third sector, local groups, schools and everyone else who can shape health and wellbeing. If you give GP practices the thinking space and autonomy to tailor services to meet the needs of their local population, consistent with the values of general practice, they will go out and make the local connections they need to care for London, connections that reflect its incredible diversity.
With this comes stability - GPs who have more time to think about what factors are making their patients ill, to think who they need to co-ordinate with mitigate them and the time to talk to these people. We can accomplish this by keeping the values of general practice at the heart of what we do.
Last updated : 26 Apr 2017Londonwide LMCs' Annual Conference calls for new models of care to stay true to the values of general practice and ease pressure on GPs (03 May 2017)
On 27 April 2017 we held our annual conference – ‘Under Pressure: stabilise, transform and sustain general practice for London’. The day provided a an opportunity for leaders in the...Londonwide LMCs' April 2017 newsletter (26 Apr 2017)
Half day closing and extended hours (25 Apr 2017)
Section 4 Part 9 of the Primary Medical Services (DES) Directions 2017/2018 indicates that from October 2017 practices that regularly close for a half day, on a weekly basis, will...Submission to APPG enquiry on demand in primary care (22 Apr 2017)
We have now submitted our response to the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on Primary Care and Public Health’s inquiry into managing demand in primary care. Our submission focused on the following...Guest blog: how can the new GP Retention Scheme help you and your colleagues (22 Apr 2017)
Our Medical Director Dr Vicky Weeks looks at the new GP Retention Scheme, which she helped negotiate as a member of the BMA’s Sessional GPs’ subcommittee. Overworked? Exhausted and can’t...New locum pension forms for 2017-18 (22 Apr 2017)
The Employers contribution for the NHS Pension scheme has increased from 14.3% to 14.38% as of 1 April 2017. The NHS Pension Agency is has issued new Locum A and B...Changes to the 2017/19 NHS Standard Contract (22 Apr 2017)
NHS England has accepted a number of changes for the new NHS Standard Contract, most notably: Results of investigations requested by hospital clinicians should be communicated by the hospital...Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards deaths - automatic coroner referrals end (04 Apr 2017)
From Monday 3 April 2017, it is no longer necessary to refer all patients who die while subject to an authorisation under the Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards (DoLS) to the...Practice managers - is your appraisal useful? Do you feel valued? (23 Mar 2017)
Practice managers have been recognised in the General Practice Forward View and NHS England have funded a new project to train practice managers to be appraisers. Londonwide LMCs is pleased...Budget 2017 (22 Mar 2017)
Rt Hon Theresa May MP’s first and final Spring 2017 Budget as PM was delivered on Wednesday 8 March. Future Budget statements will be delivered in the Autumn to allow...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.