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CQC sets out how it will inspect PA supervision in GP practices

by Anna Colivicchi
11 July 2024

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GP practices should be able to show ‘how they assure themselves’ of physician associates’ (PAs) ‘competence’ as part of CQC inspections, the watchdog has said.

The CQC has updated guidance on PAs and their supervision by doctors as part of its ‘GP mythbusters’ series designed to address common myths about inspections of GP and out-of-hours services.

It recommended that practices should only employ PAs who are on the Physician Associate Managed Voluntary Register (PAMVR), which ‘acts like a GMC register’, but it is not statutory.

But since the GMC is currently working towards becoming the professional regulator for PAs, there will be changes to the way PAs will be required to give evidence of their knowledge, the CQC added.

The document said: ‘The profession is moving closer to being regulated by the GMC. This means that there are changes to the way in which physician associates will be required to evidence their ongoing competency and up-to-date knowledge in practice.

‘Providers should be able to show how they assure themselves of the governance and ongoing competence of physician associates.’

The document also reiterated that physician associates ‘can supplement and complement but not replace’ GPs, nursing staff and other members of the practice team, and pointed to RCGP guidance, which said that PAs ‘must always work under the supervision of qualified GPs’.

It added: ‘Providers must make sure staff are competent, and they must provide appropriate supervision and oversight.

‘A senior medical member of the clinical primary care team should provide day-to-day supervision of all clinical staff under their direction and control.’

Organisations should identify an individual at GP partnership or ICB level who is ‘responsible for the supervision and oversight’ of PAs.

‘It is important to establish local processes to govern how these professionals are deployed and supervised – this is to ensure safe, high-quality care, and to support effective multi-disciplinary working,’ the guidance added.

Practices should also make sure that the supervisor is ‘easily accessible’, that staff know who the supervising member of staff is and that staff ‘have enough time to supervise’, as recommended by the BMA.

On prescribing or administering medicines, the CQC said that there should be a ‘standard operating procedure’ in place to show how the prescription is raised and monitored.

It said: ‘Physician associates can recommend prescriptions for signing by a GP, but the prescriber remains responsible and accountable for the prescription they issue. They need to be assured of the appropriateness of the consultation and the medicine being prescribed.

‘Physician associates cannot prescribe or issue medicines using Patient Group Directions (PGDs). They can administer medicines by a Patient Specific Direction (PSD).

‘There should be a standard operating procedure (SOP) in place to show how the prescription/PSD is raised and monitored. This would be considered best practice.’

The CQC added that as part of its inspections it will assess how practices ‘complete safe recruitment processes’ and that there are ‘clear’ responsibilities, roles, systems of accountability and ‘good governance’.

The watchdog started to roll out its new GP practice assessment framework from November last year.

A version of this article was first published by our sister title Pulse