#GPFUQ 97 Who’s the most
important person in the NHS? The patient in front of you
#GPFUQ 98 Why do we need a
primary care- secondary care system? In a good health care system there should
be good access, high quality and low cost. The primary care- secondary care
system seems the best way to achieve this ideal. A good system is when a
patient can easily see their GP, and the GP can give all the needed appropriate
care to most of the patients. The few patients who have more potentially
serious problems are identified by the GP and referred to the appropriate
specialist who then does all the necessary tests. For example a GP may see 100
patients with a headache and knows that 96% are likely to be self-limiting and
don’t need referral. The GP may identify 4% who he is worried about and refers
them to a specialist. That’s a 4% referral rate. When the specialist sees this
4% of patient he expects them to have a more serious problem and will usually
exhaustively test them to make sure they don’t have a serious illness. A bad
system is when the GP over investigates or refers too many of the patients or
when the specialist fails to investigate his patients enough. If a GP is risk
averse he will refer more patients to a specialist. It only needs GPs to refer
5% rather than 4% of patients to increase hospital workload and costs by 25%.
If there aren’t enough GPs then patients will end up getting poorer access to
more expensive services and lower quality over-medicalised care.
#GPFUQ 99 How many GPs do we
need? The UK consensus is that for a balanced primary care – secondary system
of health care we need 50% GP and 50% the other specialties. NHS workforce
planning has allowed this to fall to <40% and is currently funding training
of 40% GP and 60% hospital specialties. Following a 3 year training scheme
there will be a shortage of GPs and following a 6-7 year training scheme for
other specialities there may be a shortage of jobs for these other specialists.
#GPFUQ 100 How much work is
there in primary care? There are >300m consultations each year in UK primary care (90% of all NHS contacts) and 20m contact per years in A&E. Each
day there are 150,000 GP contacts, 5,000 Hospital outpatient and A&E contacts
and 600 hospital admissions. Even a marginal shift from primary care to
secondary care will overwhelm secondary care.
#GPFUQ 101 Can GPs increase
patients self treatment and reduce the need for medical involvement. If GPs don’t do the work – will GPs lose their special relationship with
their patients? General Practice can be like being a good parent it involves
not just quality time but also routine stuff so being a good GP means being
available for the minor worries, coughs and travellers' diarrhoea as well as for
major physical and psychological pathology. By dealing with the former GPs can
build the relationships they need to be able to help with the latter. However
many minor ailments could be self managed. IMS Health survey Dec 2007 shows 57m
GP consultations annually involve minor ailments, (51.4m involve MA alone), 18%
GP workload is for MA, 50% MA consultations are for 16-59yr olds, costs to NHS
£2b pa (80% are for GP time), averages 1hour/day for every GP http://www.pagb.co.uk/information/research.html#tns
Suggestions for action
·
GPs should develop a strategy for promotion of self-treatment of minor
ailments, and a triage process. Setting up self-treatment facilities and
advice.
·
RCGP should script
Video and podcasts for use on the practice website and in the waiting room that
tell patients how to look after minor ailments. Use the same RCGP script in
different practices but with the local GPs as the ‘actors’ to promote local
interest and validity. The video and podcast are accompanied by a printed
handout on the management of minor ailments. You can have video added to
video broadcasts in waiting room
·
Set up an ‘Avoid the
queue, self manage your illness’ area in the practice to advise on initial best
management for the following conditions which are the commonest minor ailments
back pain, dermatitis, heartburn and indigestion, nasal congestion,
constipation, migraine, cough, acne, sprains and strains, headache, earache,
psoriasis, conjunctivitis, sore throat, diarrhoea, haemorrhoids, cystitis, hay
fever, warts, nail infections, colds.
·
Produce an
evidence-based handout on How to manage your minor ailment for each of the
common minor ailment conditions.
·
Identify patients who
have presented with minor ailments from the consultation records of the
electronic health record and after the consultation mail the patient the
information sheet How to manage your minor ailment for the relevant conditions-
invite patients to return feedback sheet to enter into a prize draw
·
Gain greater value from previously under-utilised sources. This may
include: enabling patients, carers and communities to manage and improve their
own health and/or contribute to the process of healthcare; empowering members
of the healthcare team whose contribution is at present limited owing to lack
of training for example; and/or removing barriers that are standing in the way
of obtaining full value from all members of the healthcare team eg ‘practice to
the limit of the licence’
·
Triaging, consulting and prescribing for common benign conditions
without red flags e.g cold, sore throat, UTIs in women, acne minor skin
problems etc. Transfer most care of minor illnesses to triage by others and
taught self care
·
Getting experienced staff to deliver some of doctors duties, i.e writing
prescription for minor illness
·
Use local newspaper adverts about management of minor ailments
·
The RCGP should publish a template for best practice
#GPFUQ 102 How do you become an expert? An expert is someone who
has made a lot of mistakes. You will miss every common treatable problem once
in your professional lifetime. Disasters happen as a chain of small mistakes. Try to learn from the mistakes of others, you won't have time to make
them all yourself.
#GPFUQ 103 What the difference
between experience and making mistakes. Experience reminds you and makes you
recognise a mistake when you make it again. It’s inevitable that you will make
mistakes – that fuels learning. It you keep making the same mistake – that’s
incompetence. Success
gives you a habit, failure gives you learning
#GPFUQ 104 Are most problems in primary care
trivial or self limiting? Yes
Trivial and self limiting illnesses are not difficult problems. Good GPs know
that patients may present with a simple illness but often have an underlying
worry about their health that needs to be identified and addressed. You can use
the opportunity that trivial and self limiting illnesses give you to build your
relationship and advising patients on healthy lifestyles and opportunistic
health screening opportunities
#GPFUQ 105 How difficult can it be to manage
self limiting illnesses? It’s easy
to manage self limiting illnesses. It can be difficult to manage the patients
that have the illnesses.
No comments:
Post a Comment