Commenting on the Delivery Plan for
Recovering Access to Primary Care Beccy Baird, Senior
Fellow at The King’s Fund said:
‘Recognition that improving primary care services, from GP access
to community support, requires action across the entire health
and care system is very welcome. To make the kinds of system
changes required for general practice it is essential that, over
the long-term, primary care is as much of a priority as reducing
the hospital backlog. And this is going to take considerable
time, focus and a collective effort. Experienced GPs, who are
already overstretched are vital to this effort, and so providing
funding to free up some of their time to lead change efforts is
welcome.
‘The idea that community pharmacies will be able to offer more
clinical services to patients has long been the direction of
travel so it’s good to see investment in this. However, not all
pharmacies will be able to offer these services and it will be
really frustrating for patients to be bumped from pillar to post,
only to end up back at the GP. Local areas will need to think
very carefully about how they communicate which services are
available where and to whom.
‘With demand massively outweighing capacity, whether the
proposals will be radical enough to turn things around in the
real world, remains to be seen. Without a long-awaited and fully
funded national workforce strategy to address staff shortages
across general practice and community pharmacy, today’s plan,
while welcome, will not make the much-needed improvements in
access that patients and staff are hoping for.’