‘We write as NHS doctors who believe we now must come out fighting for the NHS. The NHS is a vitally important service delivering care to all those who need it, free at the point of need. But it is suffering badly after nearly a decade of Conservative government neglect, underfunding and creeping privatisation. We fear another five years of Tory rule will finish it off.
The Government in their panic are making wild promises about 50,000 extra nurses, 6,000 more GPs and 40 extra hospitals, all of which are misleading or actual lies.
Don’t listen to their promises, look at their record.
Last winter in the NHS was the worst on record with dangerously high bed occupancy, growing waiting times for cancer care and 4.4 million patients waiting for treatment. This winter is shaping up to be even worse.
There has been a 1,000% increase in patients waiting on trolleys, because the UK has less than half the hospital bed numbers of countries like France and Germany. We spend less per head on health than most of our neighbouring countries.
The result of this neglect and underfunding is that the NHS now has a “winter crisis” all year round. The 100,000 staff shortages, lack of beds and cuts to social and community care mean dangerous levels of unrelenting pressure on hospitals, GPs, nurses and other NHS staff.
Behind these statistics is a human tragedy. We, our families and loved ones all depend on the NHS. It’s time to say “enough is enough”. If the NHS is to become once again safe for patients and staff we need a change of government to one that will rebuild the NHS as a great public service for all.
We call on you to vote on Thursday to make sure this happens. As NHS doctors we firmly believe the NHS will not survive another 5 years of Conservative government.’
Sponsors: Dr Jacky Davis, consultant radiologist, London, Dr Louise Irvine, GP, London
The doctors’ letter, co-sponsored by consultant radiologist Dr Davis and GP and activist Dr Irvine, is backed by medical heavyweights including Prof Neena Modi, the former president of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health.
Others include top gynaecologist and abortion rights campaigner Prof Wendy Savage and campaigning junior doctor Dr Aislinn Macklin-Doherty.
The NHS now “buys in” more services than ever before from private companies, pouring away a fifth of its budget in to profit-making firms.
In England the NHS spent £24billion – or 18% of its budget – on buying private healthcare services in 2018/19.
The Effects
Experts were warning before the pandemic that chronic recruitment and retention issues had left primary care at breaking point.
The focus has largely been on the number of people going into hospital with COVID and those missing out on treatment as a result of backlogs – but GPs are also in crisis.
Analysis has found that the number of fully qualified GPs has fallen in four out of five areas in England since March 2016, with the North experiencing some of the biggest drops. The figures are adjusted for GPs working part-time and job sharing.
“The shortage of GPs has both a huge impact on the remaining colleagues, whose workload increases, but crucially it has an effect on the care practices are able to offer,” Dr Krishna Kasaraneni, executive member of the British Medical Association’s (BMA) GP committee says.
Our analysis also reveals that more deprived areas generally have fewer GPs than wealthier ones and that gap has widened over time.
“Wherever you are in the country, it’s feeling very, very difficult for GPs at the moment,” Dr Kasaraneni says. But “there are significant challenges with areas of deprivation.”
“We tend to struggle to recruit GPs more because the workload there is significantly higher and more challenging.”
A study by the Health Foundation also concluded that general practice is under the most pressure in England’s poorest areas – where it is least equipped to make improvements.
“Initiatives to recruit and retain more GPs are necessary but not sufficient to level up general practice. Specific programmes are needed to ensure that additional GP capacity is directed to the areas of highest need,” the report says.
More appointments but fewer face to face
While the number of doctors is going down, Sky News has found the number of appointments is going up.
Between July and August there were 4% more GP sessions than in the same period in 2019.
“Workload in surgeries across the country is soaring, with an increase in demand from people living with a number of complex conditions, as well as mounting bureaucracy and a record backlog of patients” because of the pandemic, Dr Kasaraneni says.
Despite that, people are still hesitant to seek medical help, with the most recent GP People Survey showing 42% of those polled had avoided making an appointment in the past 12 months.
Although digital triage systems can help manage resources better by directing people to pharmacists, physiotherapists and nurses instead, they can still increase workloads for doctors.
“For some people digitalisation works really well,” Beccy Baird, senior fellow in health policy at the King’s Fund told Sky News.
“But there’s a lot of complex risk to be managed over the phone and it’s very intense for GPs. When the pandemic hit and digitalisation was mandated for everyone, there wasn’t enough support for GPs to do it well.”
GP recruitment and retention crisis
Before the pandemic, in February 2020 the government committed to recruiting 6,000 new GPs and a further 26,000 health professionals across NHS England by 2024.
But so far, numbers have been going down. There are two different ways of measuring the number of doctors. Both show a reduction.
A target “isn’t going to be enough”, Dr Kasaraneni says.
“We need better investment and infrastructure and we need some of the bureaucracy to be removed so we can spend more time looking after patients and clinical capacity.”
Less than 1% of the GPs in England is under the age of 30, compared to 23% who are over-55, Sky News has found.
“More younger doctors are choosing general practice,” Dr Kasaraneni says. “But this is not keeping up with the numbers of invaluably experienced GPs leaving at the other end.”
“It’s pretty clear we don’t have the number of GPs other countries do,” Ms Baird says. “We’re training more GPs than ever before, but what’s happening is we’re not keeping them.”
“Retention is the most significant problem across the whole country – particularly in more deprived areas,” Professor Marshall of the RCGP says.
“We’re seeing an increasing number of GPs that is only managing to cope by working part-time. And we’re seeing a growing number of GPs in their 50s and early 60s, who are retiring early as a consequence.
“We need to keep on training, but we also need to make general practice attractive later in careers so that people feel able to work and not feel forced into retirement because the job is basically undoable.”
The government has announced additional funding for Primary Care to “tackle underperformance, taking pressure off staff so they can spend more time with patients and increase the number of face-to-face appointments,” the Health Secretary Sajid Javid said.
Access is only part of the problem
“Both access and continuity of care are important,” Professor Marshall says.
If people have regular contact with their GP serious conditions are less likely to go undiagnosed and require hospital care.
But when patients struggle to see a family doctor they can seek emergency care in hospital, experts warn.
“Investing in Primary Care will actually decrease the burden for the whole of the NHS”, Dr Kasaraneni says.
The problems Primary Care is facing have “implications for the quality of patient care. They have implications for the mental health of GPs. And of course, they have implications for the wider NHS as well,” Professor Marshall says.
“When general practice struggles, the whole of the NHS struggles.”
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