Thursday, January 16, 2025
spot_img

Indian-origin doctor warns UK over work pressures

Date:

Share post:

spot_img
spot_img

London: One of Britain’s senior-most Indian-origin doctor on Thursday warned the UK government not to pile more pressure on already over-worked medical staff in the country, saying it would damage quality care.
Chaand Nagpaul, chair of the British Medical Association (BMA) General Practice Committee, made his comments in reference to Prime Minister David Cameron’s election pledge to ensure general practitioners (GPs) surgeries will be open seven days a week.
“The government must halt its surreal obsession for practices to open seven days when there aren’t the GPs to even cope with current demands,” Nagpaul said at an annual conference of local medical committees.
“It would damage quality care by spreading GPs so thinly, and replace continuity of care with impersonal shift work, and will reduce our availability for older, vulnerable patients,” added the principal spokesperson for UK-based GPs.
During the general election campaign earlier this year, the ruling Conservatives pledged access to GPs between 8 am and 8 pm seven days a week, by 2020 in England.
The party also pledged everyone over 75 would get a same-day appointment to see their GP.
But the proposals have been rejected and GPs warn that plans to recruit 5,000 more doctors in England would fail as they are fleeing the profession due to being over-worked and the lack of support.
“It’s absolutely pointless promising 5,000 extra GPs within this Parliament if we lose 10,000 GPs retiring in the same period,” Nagpaul said, pointing to a survey of 15,000 GPs which showed one in three intending to retire. He said demand on services has soared as practices are used as the “backstop for every problem in the NHS and beyond”.
There were 40 million more GP appointments annually than five years ago, yet the proportion of NHS funds spent in general practice was falling, he said, calling for a complete overhaul of the system.
The UK government’s Department of Health dismissed the warnings as “overly negative and pessimistic view” from the doctors’ union.
“Thousands of GPs across the country are already offering patients GP access seven days a week – by next March, a third of the country will be covered.  “We have made it very clear that we will train 5,000 more GPs and have backed the NHS’s own plan for the future by investing the 8 billion pounds it needs to transform care closer to home,” a spokesperson said. (PTI)

spot_img
spot_img

Related articles

India set to become ‘GCC Capital of the World’

New Delhi, Jan 16: India is set to become the ‘GCC Capital of the World’ with 1,700 global...

12 doctors suspended, says CM Mamata Banerjee in two hospital death cases

Kolkata, Jan 16:  The West Bengal health department has suspended 12 doctors after the death of a woman...

Saif Ali Khan stabbing case: 2.5 inches of knife recovered from actor’s wound

Mumbai, Jan 16:  Bollywood actor Saif Ali Khan was reportedly attacked with a 2.5 inch knife by an...

Hindenburg’s own demise likely to shield itself from regulatory consequences under Trump 2.0

New Delhi, Jan 16: Hindenburg Research, the controversial activist short-selling firm founded by Nathan Anderson in 2017, has...