GP Forward View five years on

The GP Forward View (GPFV) launched on 21 April 2016, with several commitments and aims for improving general practice and the care provided to patients. On 28 April, Dr Lisa Harrod-Rothwell, our Deputy CEO, wrote an article for Pulse looking at the GPFV five years on.

Some of these aims were general, but some ambitions and objectives had quantifiable targets such as money invested, additional personnel working in practices, a particular service being available to patients, etc. We have summarised these aims below, as a reminder of what should have been delivered over the five years since the GPFV launch in 2016.

The wording is lifted directly from the GPFV document, unless appearing in square brackets.

Overall funding

  • By 2020/21 recurrent funding to increase by an estimated £2.4 billion a year, decisively growing the share of spend on general practice services, and coupled with a ‘turnaround’ package of a further £500 million.
  • £508 million five year Sustainability and Transformation package for general practice to help further support struggling practices in the interim, develop the workforce, stimulate care redesign and tackle workload. This package will include:
    • £56 million, to include a new practice resilience programme starting in 2016/17, and the offer of specialist services to GPs suffering from burn out and stress.
    • £206 million for workforce measures to grow the medical and non-medical workforce.
    • £246 million to support practices in redesigning services, including a requirement on CCGs to provide around £171 million of practice transformational support and a new national £30 million development programme for general practice).

Workforce

  • Increase the number of doctors in general practice by 5,000.
  • [Launch] a major international recruitment drive, to attract up to 500 appropriately trained and qualified doctors – and possibly more - from overseas over the next five years.
  • Health Education England will roll out a total of 250 post CCT fellowships by summer 2017 to offer wider and more varied training opportunities in areas of poorest GP recruitment.
  • We need to accelerate this [induction and refresher scheme] further so that we can attract at least an extra 500 doctors over the next five years back into general practice.
  • Increase the number of other health professionals by at least 5,000:
    • 1,500 more pharmacists.
    • 3,000 more mental health therapists.
    • 1,000 more physician associates.
  • £15 million nationally in general practice nurse development, including support for return to work schemes, improving training capacity in general practice for nurses, increases in the number of pre-registration nurse placements and other measures to improve retention.
  • Extend the clinical pharmacists programme with a new £112 million offer to enable every practice to access a clinical pharmacist across a minimum population on average of 30,000 - leading to an extra 1,500 pharmacists in general practice.
  • An extra £6 million in practice manager development.

PCNs

  • Establishing primary care networks across the whole country, backed by £1.8 billion of funding by 2023.
  • A new £300 million Fund by 2023 will include networks making faster progress in achieving the outcomes described in the NHS Long Term Plan.

Estates and IT

  • Additional capital will also be invested in general practice beyond the Estates and Technology Transformation Fund which means that the overall total investment in capital assets up to 2020/21 will be £900 million.
  • All patients will have the right to digital-first primary care, including web and video consultations in 2021.
  • Over 18 percent increase in allocations to CCGs for provision of IT services and technology for general practice.
  • £45 million national programme to stimulate uptake of online consultations systems for every practice.

Collaboration

  • The Better Care Fund (BCF) requires CCGs and local authorities to pool budgets and to agree an integrated spending plan for how they will use their BCF allocation. In 2016/17, the minimum size of the BCF has been increased to £3.9 billion.

Regulation

  • Practices rated good and outstanding – currently the vast majority - will move to a maximum interval between inspections of five years, subject to the provision of transparent data, available to CQC, NHS England and CCGs; and also to CQC remaining assured that the quality of care has not changed significantly since the previous inspection. Where CQC has concerns, it may revisit sooner.

You can read the General Practice Forward View document here.

Last updated : 28 Apr 2021

 

Standing up for Sessional GPs - What your LMC can do for you (19 Dec 2016)

Early notice of LMC event for Sessional GPs  Ealing, Harrow, Hammersmith and Fulham areas - please note in your diaries Standing up for Sessional GPs - What your LMC can...
Read more »

NHS Shared Business Services lost records repatriation (14 Dec 2016)

In July it was found that a backlog of clinical correspondence and results stretching back over several years remained in NHS Shared Business Services (SBS) storage areas and had not been processed....
Read more »

New Blue Stream Academy induction module launched (13 Dec 2016)

Blue Stream Academy, the Buying Group’s approved supplier for online training, has added a unique and editable induction module to their GP Practice eLearning suite. The new module is...
Read more »

Londonwide LMCs secures new assurance role for GP funding (13 Dec 2016)

Against a backdrop of enforced MPIG reductions and successive unworkable London Offers (see PMS Bulletin 9) we have been actively pushing the London NHS and Mayoral systems to support...
Read more »

Londonwide LMCs’ winter workforce survey (13 Dec 2016)

Our latest workforce survey concluded earlier this week and had another fantastic response from across London’s general practice community. We had nearly 700 responses from across half of all of...
Read more »

Patient online update (13 Dec 2016)

There is an agreed aspiration between the GPC (General Practitioners Committee) of the BMA and the NHS that practices attempt to register 10% of patients for online services by 31...
Read more »

Guest blog - What makes a successful patient participation group (13 Dec 2016)

Derek Spencer, Chair of Gillan House Surgery's patient participation group (PPG), shares how they are  successful at raising money and campaigning on the practice’s behalf. About three years ago I...
Read more »

Patient engagement survey 2016 - headline findings and key themes (13 Dec 2016)

Londonwide LMCs’ Patient Engagement Project started in July 2016. The project aims to support London GP practice teams in working collaboratively with their patients to shape high quality services and...
Read more »
Next Page »
« Previous Page