Tuesday 25 February 2014

Challenging Times

I am slightly surprised to be writing this but The Prime Ministers Challenge Fund has done much to stimulate debate in primary care. WE have seen real enthusiasm to change things. To really get stuck into tackling the intransigent issues that face very rural health care. And this is new. WE have great GPs in our CCG, apparently they score the highest in patient satisfaction in primary care of all CCGs in the country. But they haven’t been at the forefront of innovation. What they have been great at is high quality patient centred traditional general practice that values relationship, continuity, commitment. They are mainly although not exclusively small practices dotted amongst the rolling dales and moors of North Yorkshire.

They are worried about the future, for their own services and for the wider health community. The big change is that now our GPs have said they need to stop complaining and start doing. They are planning bigger that just working together as GP practices, they want to look to providing locally based community services and out of hours services, that work closely with mental health and social care services . All joined up and working together. They are prepared to lead that. That includes looking at a different model for the GP contract too. They have a vision, they are developing how to express it and what to call it.

Most of our practices are MPIG practices and stand to lose a lot of investment over the next few years. The cynics may say that that is why they want to do this but I see it as part of a much bigger picture. It may have made them think differently but the prize of working in a system that delivers local care for local people all joined up, supporting each other reducing duplication, stopping endless journeys to distant hospitals for things that could be delivered locally and developing robust health care hubs ( or whatever you want to call them.. there are many names being banded about) would be an exciting and different place to work. Who wouldn’t want to be part of something amazing like that? Was it the fund alone? Or was it a kind of “perfect storm”? I am not sure.. what I do know is that sometimes that is just how stuff changes. Suddenly and for no apparent reason a lot of different things conspire to bring about significant shifts in attitude, in ambition.

We mustn’t lose this. If it is happening all over the country the NHS needs to find a way to harness all this energy and use it. Thee is £50M for ? 9 pilots. If there is £50M would 25 projects with £2M be another way? 2 million is a lot of money.. our CCG management budget to deliver everything is somewhere around £3.5M, do so few pilots really need so much money? I would hate to lose all this and return to the status quo…..

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