Department of Health plans for 7 day GP
Whitehall’s spending watchdog has criticised government plans to let patients see GPs every day of the week as poorly planned and likely to cost much more than weekday family doctor services.
In a new report, the National Audit Office said that Jeremy Hunt has set targets for rolling out the scheme – a key Conservative pledge – without evaluating the cost or working out where the money for it would come from.
Giving patients access to GPs from 8am to 8pm across the entire week by 2020 was championed by David Cameron while he was prime minister. Ministers also pledged to increase the number of GPs in England by 5,000 by 2020 – promises that have been backed by Hunt and Theresa May .
However, auditors who analysed the pledges found that the minimum additional capacity required by the new commitment equates to £230 per appointment hour at weekends and in the evening for every 1,000 registered patients. In GPs’ core contracted hours, from 8am to 6.30pm, the cost is just £154.
Hunt and the prime minister are under increasing pressure regarding serious problems within frontline services this winter. Ministers have been forced to deny claims by the Red Cross that the service is facing a “humanitarian disaster”.
Dr Chaand Nagpaul, BMA GP committee chair, said the government had been “irresponsible” in making uncosted pledges and must deliver extra investment to ensure patients could receive timely, safe care.
“Given that funding in general practice has failed to meet patient demand, NHS England and commissioners need to fully consider the consequences of their plans to extend access,” he said.
“To proceed without any sort of evaluation into the cost-effectiveness or the consequences of its objectives is irresponsible and could lead to much needed investment being spent.