The Cornishman

GEORGE EUSTICE MP

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THERE has been a lot of debate about the future of general practice and whether the traditiona­l model can survive. Although the NHS budget today is almost double what it was in 2010, as medical science progresses and people live longer the number of calls on that expanding budget have continued to grow. The growing prevalence of mental health conditions has increased the demand for GP services and there has also been a backlog of problems in the aftermath of the pandemic. Although there has been a major drive to recruit and train more GPs there has also been a growing trend towards different working patterns. Practices report that it is difficult to recruit partners to make a long-term commitment. Newly qualified doctors often want more flexibilit­y and a portfolio career, doing some shifts at a practice but perhaps some in a hospital too. There is reluctance to take on the pressure of undertakin­g surgeries five days a week and the average GP now typically works three days a week in surgeries and does other work outside that.

To try to accommodat­e these different working patterns some GP practices have federated into groups to create more resilience and sought to offer different forms of support, with more cases triaged to nurses or other assistants. There has also been a trend towards offering more support by telephone and trying to triage appointmen­ts that are available. The local NHS has sought to put in place separately funded hubs, supposedly to relieve the pressure on surgeries. Each GP practice has had to adapt in a way that works for them, but many patients say they find it harder to get an appointmen­t and there is less continuity of care because a patient is less likely to be seen and supported by the same GP.

Last week I visited Bodriggy Surgery in Hayle. They have attempted to adhere to the traditiona­l model of general practice despite the challenges. They still aim to fill most of their staff vacancies with full partners. Each of the 10 partners takes their own list of patients from the total list, meaning those partners acquire knowledge of their patients over time and patients develop a bond of trust with their GP. As a result, perception­s about the practice tend to be better, as they understand each of their patients and their history in a way that goes beyond the medical notes.

Should the response to the pressures on general practice be to deviate from the traditiona­l model and try different approaches, or redouble efforts to adhere to the essential tenets of the traditiona­l model and work on clearing the obstacles to that model working properly? It is not an easy decision, and different practices have had to react to the circumstan­ces they are dealing with, but before allowing a presumptio­n to set in that things have changed so much that the traditiona­l model can no longer work in the modern world we ought to stress-test that assumption.

 ?? ?? » George Eustice is the Conservati­ve MP for Camborne and Redruth
» George Eustice is the Conservati­ve MP for Camborne and Redruth

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