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Digital services will help ease GP shortages, says Simon Stevens

by Léa Legraien
24 June 2019

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The greater use of technology to deliver GP services will encourage part-time GPs to take on extra services and will help mitigate the effects of the ‘inverse care law’, the NHS England chief executive has claimed.
 
Speaking last week (19 June) at the NHS Confederation conference in Manchester, Simon Stevens suggested the use of digital services in surgeries could help address workforce issues, especially in the most affected areas.
 
He also claimed that it would help deprived areas, who – according to the inverse care law – are in greater need of more healthcare resources but are less likely to receive them.
 
Last month, figures published by NHS Digital showed that the number of fully-qualified GPs in England has fallen by 441 over the past year, from 29,138 in March 2018 to 28,697 in March this year.
 
Mr Stevens said there is ‘some evidence’ that digital GP services can encourage part-time GPs to do more sessions.
 
He said: ‘We’ve got to think creatively about whether some of these new digital models of care delivery, for example in digital general practice, are actually a way of increasing the number of flexible sessions that part-time GPs are willing to work.
 
‘There is some evidence that that is the case. That has to be one of the tests as we expand this model if we really can get more sessions worked on a flexible basis through these digital methods of delivery and target those on parts of the country.’
 
He added: ‘Where there are particular GP shortages, this could be a way of dealing with the inverse care law. We’ll be consulting on proposals in that respect next week.’
 
Mr Stevens also confirmed that NHS England will consult on the rules around out-of-area registration and ‘digital-first primary care’ around the same time.
 
Practices have been able to register new patients who live outside their practice area – without any obligation to offer home visits – since 2015.
 
This article was first published by our sister publication Pulse.