UK Health Radio – Medical News Update On the Hour
NHS GP
Staffing Crisis
The BBC has reported that hundreds of GP practices
are at risk of closure because of the number of doctors reaching retirement
age.
An analysis carried out by the Royal College of GPs
has identified 543 GP practices out of the 8,000 in England it believes could
be forced to shut in the next year.
Those practices all have more than 90% of their
doctors aged over 60 - the average retirement age for a GP is 59.
The research was released at the start of the
RCGP's conference on Thursday and comes just two days after ministers unveiled
ambitious plans to create seven-day GP services.
The proposals - set out during the Conservative
Party conference - included promises of extra money to ensure access during the
whole week by 2020.
But the central theme of the RCGP conference will
be the pressures GPs are facing now, just providing the current level of
services.
RCGP chair Dr Maureen Baker said extra investment
was needed just to keep the system afloat - never mind expanding it.
She said the amount spent on GPs as a proportion of
the NHS budget had been falling in recent years, and needed to increase from
the current "historic low" of just over 8% to 11% by 2017.
Speaking to BBC Radio 4's Today programme ahead of
the start of the conference in Liverpool, she said: "We do have a
workforce crisis in general practice.
"We've been losing GPs, we are losing GPs and
we're not recruiting enough doctors into the profession."
Comparing general practice to the "walls of a
dam" that prevents the rest of the NHS being flooded, Dr Baker said:
"So far much of the damage to the dam wall has been hidden from the
public.
"They see the flooding downstream in A&E
departments and in hospital pressures - but they haven't been aware that GPs,
nurses and practice teams have been absorbing that pressure by trying to do
more and more with less and less.
"But if we let that situation continue we will
see whole chunks of the dam fall apart when practices have to shut their
doors."
She described the situation as
"shocking".
But the Department of Health said it was investing
in new GPs. It said the number of GP training places was rising. Last year
there were just over 2,700, but by 2016 it will hit 3,250 a year.
Amanda Thomas
UK Health Radio – Medical
News Update On the Hour
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