UCLH positive response to reducing inappropriate transfers of activity
Leaders from University College London Hospitals Foundation Trust have written to consultants and GPs following representation from LMCs. Their letter includes this advice:
"Please actively have conversations with patients in order to maintain public confidence in primary care. There are other practical ways UCLH can help too, including supporting our teams to organise tests in UCLH or moving forwards community phlebotomy clinics, referrals, follow-ups, or check results at UCLH, rather than asking GPs to do this. Making the whole system work together more efficiently will improve patient experience.
“We appreciate there are huge pressures on ULCH services too, and we are already asking an enormous amount from our teams, but by everyone in the NHS working together we will be in a much stronger position to deal with the challenges ahead. So we ask our UCLH teams to bring primary care into our #oneteam and give them our support.”
The full letter can be read here and was issued following a presentation by Dr Tina Agrawal, Chair of Camden LMC, on behalf of LMC chairs in North Central London (NCL).
Dr Agrawal’s presentation covered:
- The unseen pressures on general practice which patients and clinicians working elsewhere in the system are often unaware of.
- The record numbers of GP appointments being provided, including NCL GPs offering 28% more than pre-pandemic levels.
- Reminding the Trust of areas of activity that are its responsibility, rather than that of GPs, and praising those areas where the Trust was meeting or exceeding these requirements.
This is part of a wider, pan-London area of activity by individual LMCS and Londonwide LMCs to reduce inappropriate transfers of activity from trusts to GPs, and the corresponding additional work for GPs and distress for patients this causes. This activity also aims to ensure that all parts of the medical profession speak positively about each other when dealing with patients, acknowledging the systemic pressures on everyone.
Contact details for individual LMCs can be found here, they are always keen to hear concerns from constituent GPs and practice team members.
Following contact from LMC reps and other GPs, Prof Alistair Chesser, Group Chief Medical Officer for Barts wrote to consultants in November 2021. His letter included these requests:
"We can help primary care in many ways. Please actively support our GP colleagues when speaking to your patients - our problems lie in the demands on our systems not with individual doctors and nurses. And please act as an ally and call out and challenge any 'anti GP' statements if you hear them. Such talk can only be harmful as well as being unfair, disrespectful and most likely untrue.
"And please also avoid asking GP surgeries to do things if possible if they lie outside the bounds of the GP contract. In essence, if we can more easily do the test/ follow up/ check the result / make the referral and it will be better or as good for the patient if we do, then do so. There is a net saving of work for the system and for the patient, and by doing so we are protecting each other. We are looking at how we can keep patients on the waiting list informed without involving our clinical staff when possible."Last updated : 22 Feb 2022
Provider Development Masterclasses (31 Mar 2016)
This series of day-long masterclasses aims to equip participants with relevant, practical business skills and knowledge that they can take back and use in their localities. Topics have been selected...RCGP guide to supporting information for appraisal and revalidation (30 Mar 2016)
The RCGP has approved a new guide to supporting information for appraisal and revalidation (March 2016) that aims to reduce inconsistencies in interpretation and streamline the process of providing...London GP Registration for Offenders (30 Mar 2016)
Londonwide LMCs welcomes the London GP Registration for Offenders initiative, it helps practices deal with the needs of an often vulnerable and challenging group of patients. Offenders have exactly the same rights...Patient online access for children aged 11-16 years (24 Mar 2016)
NHS England (NHSE) and the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) have produced some helpful guidance about proxy access regarding Patient Online. The full guidance is available here and...Budget 2016 (17 Mar 2016)
Budget 2016 was, on the whole, fairly innocuous for health professionals. There were very few health-specific announcements (some money for children’s hospitals outside London) and a couple of measures that...New Housing Application letter and poster (17 Mar 2016)
Our new waiting room poster and template practice letter will help practice staff manage requests for letters supporting housing applications.Patient Online detailed coded record (DCR) deadline is 31 March 2016 (16 Mar 2016)
This month sees the deadline for enabling online access to patients’ detailed coded record (DCR). Practices have until 31 March 2016 to switch this on. The latest figures we...PMS contract reviews update (16 Mar 2016)
We recently issued our third PMS (Personal Medical Services) bulletin on the reviews taking place across London. Our bulletins are designed to bring you the current PMS contract review information...New Men B immunisation advice (16 Mar 2016)
Following recent high profile stories about child deaths from meningitis B, Public Health England has issued further advice: Men B immunisation programme Following recent media coverage about the death of...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.
