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The GP Contract

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The GP Contract. The Road To Here And Beyond. Why the GMS ... criticism of GP pay and ... 75 points to reward GP practices for convenient access based on ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The GP Contract


1
  • The GP Contract
  • The Road To Here And Beyond

2
Why the GMS contract had to change
  • Red Book was John Wayne contract without
    boundaries
  • OOH responsibility
  • Erosion of pay against a pool
  • Complexity of contractual arrangements
  • Worsening recruitment/retention within the
    profession
  • Increased use of local PMS contract

3
nGMS
  • OOH opt-out of responsibility
  • Defined core services
  • No new work without new money
  • An explicit pay rise
  • to compensate for the unresourced work
    transferred to General Practice over the previous
    15 years
  • to encourage recruitment and retention
  • Pensionability of all NHS/government work
  • The end of the GMS/PMS monopoly

4
Potential problems with nGMS
  • Definition of core services
  • Initial deliberate de-funding of global sum
  • Excessive ratio of QOF to global sum
  • Inadequate funding of global sum
  • Still too much discretion for PCOs
  • Governments right to alter contract unilaterally

5
2006
  • No increase in global sum
  • New work and funding delivered through DESs
  • New areas of QOF work introduced
  • Governments perception of over-performance and
    value for money addressed once and for all

6
2007
  • DDRB recommends 0 pay increase
  • DoH interprets this as no resource increase for
    general practice

7
2007 the press campaign
  • Constant criticism of GP pay and hours
  • Linked with failure of out-of-hours care across
    the country
  • The extended hours debate
  • Darzis Next Stage Review in England

8
2008-9 The GPC proposed compromise
  • Funding for Access and CB DES plus 11m from
    Patient Survey to fund extended hours
  • Similar level of funding in DAs
  • Extended hours - 20 minutes per 1,000 patients
  • 15 minutes appointments and 5 minutes admin
  • Flexibly provided and voluntary participation
  • Patient survey to determine convenient access
  • Redistribution of 38.5 QOF points to
    osteoporosis, peripheral vascular disease, and
    new heart failure indicator and additional points
    for CKD
  • Would deliver if reasonable new resources
    introduced into the contract via DDRB award

9
2008-9 The government offer
  • In England uses funding from Access and CB DES
    for extended hours (158 million)
  • Diverts money 58.5 QOF points to support access
    arrangements
  • Extended hours - 30 minutes per 1,000 patients
  • Either in 1.5 hour blocks at evenings / weekends
  • Or 1 hour blocks on weekday early mornings
  • Payment dependent in part on patient survey
  • Guaranteed uplift in contract of 1.5 in event of
    DDRB award for GPs being less
  • DoH claims that an additional 100 million is
    being provided - this is the 1.5

10
2008-9 The GPC response
  • GPC voted not to accept government offer and to
    seek the professions views because
  • The extended hours element is felt to be too
    onerous for the money on offer and would not meet
    the costs
  • The diversion of funds from quality to
    non-evidence-based access imperative is
    unacceptable
  • The 1.5 uplift has too many strings and will
    require even more hours to be worked
  • It was not prepared to accept a deal under threat
    of imposition

11
2008-9 The imposition in England
  • Loss of Access and CB DES funding
  • Money from these available to PCTs to agree
    contracts for extended opening with practices
  • QOF cut by 135 points
  • - 75 points to reward GP practices for
    convenient access based on patient survey
  • - 60 points to invest in primary medical care
  • QOF thresholds increased by up to 20
  • Funding from QOF cuts passed to PCOs, so
    recovering this will require further local
    negotiations
  • Diverts funds from quality clinical care to
    political targets
  • Treasury and Gordon Brown led

12
What happens next?
  • Unilateral change requires 13 weeks
    consultation
  • Negotiations continue
  • Poll of GPs opinion during this time
  • Imposition on 1st April 2008
  • Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland yet announce
    their plans

13
Issues to consider
  • Profession should view in widest terms
  • Governments method of negotiation
  • Lack of value placed on quality care
  • Government ignoring views of majority of patients
    to deliver own political agenda
  • Move towards privatisation
  • GPC could not accept deal

14
Choices to be made
  • Accept the offer
  • Reject the offer, in which case
  • The government imposes its changes

15
Choice 1 Accept the offer
  • The blow is less severe than the imposition
  • It allows practices to continue to function
    broadly as they do at present
  • This will represent a further pay cut after costs
    are taken into account
  • There is no guarantee that GPs will get all the
    money back
  • Providing extended hours could adversely impact
    on in-hours service leading to poorer patient
    satisfaction
  • The imposition may become next years offer
    lets the government get away with gun-barrel
    negotiating

16
Choice 2 Reject the offer
  • Imposition of the governments unilateral changes
  • Serious financial problems for some
  • Depends on whether you can get back 12k per GP
    from your PCO
  • Your costs could exceed 12k
  • Hands a large amount of funding to PCOs
    previously in the national contract
  • Provides funding for PCOs to fund APMS

17
Where does this road lead?
  • Government agenda in England
  • APMS
  • WICs
  • NHS-D
  • Cheaper general practice in polyclinics
  • GP agenda
  • Do we have to leave NHS to survive?
  • GPs will be blamed for this

18
What can we do if we face imposition?
  • Avoiding action which adversely affects patient
    care
  • - participation in government initiatives
  • - GPs must respond by being united
  • The End Of The World?
  • Resignation
  • Do we all go APMS and merge with corporations?
  • GPC considering strategy

19
Leaving the NHS
  • Loss of all current NHS income streams
  • Global sum
  • MPIG
  • QOF
  • Premises funding
  • Pension accrual (pension to date is frozen)
  • IT
  • Political impact
  • - Loss of NHS prescriptions
  • Loss of PCO / DoH interference

20
Is it going to happen anyway?
  • Government agenda to introduce alternative
    providers in England to compete with GPs
  • Even if vote for deal this year, bigger battle
    continues keep patient campaign going
  • Timing
  • If we are in for trouble why not in our time?
  • Government in trouble now

21
What to do now
  • Study the offer and the imposition
  • Decide whether the offer is acceptable
  • Decide if rejection is better than the offer
  • Talk to partners, colleagues and the LMC
  • Read messages from GPC
  • Remain united
  • Vote when the poll is held
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