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Opening up the primary care market may “destabilise” practices

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1 April 2009

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Government reforms to increase patient choice and to stimulate competition between healthcare providers may result in underused capacity in some areas and difficulties in attracting new providers into other areas, warn experts in an article published on bmj.com today.

There is also a risk that new providers may unintentionally destabilise existing practices delivering a high standard of care to patients if they are offered guaranteed funding for the provision of services, they add.

By the end of March, every PCT in England should have commissioned a new GP-led health centre, write Jo Ellins and colleagues from the Health Services Management Centre in Birmingham.

Supporters of these reforms have argued that these “create a framework to challenge GP service delivery and encourage innovation in order to meet people’s changing healthcare needs.”

But opponents have expressed concerns about the dangers of “the aggressive commercial takeover of general practice and other NHS clinical services.” Questions have also been raised about whether every PCT needs a new GP-led health centre.

The introduction of a national procurement programme has the potential to address health inequalities by increasing the number of primary care professionals in areas of unmet need, as well as broadening the range and availability of services provided closer to home, they write.

However, the extent to which equitable access can bring in new providers is also in doubt, especially in the current financial climate.

Spare capacity and instability may be necessary to create the conditions for choice and competition, but their consequences will need to be managed if the government’s policies are to deliver real benefits for patients, they conclude.

BMJ