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Talking General Practice
GP funding cuts, problems at the primary care interface, measles concern
In this week’s podcast the team discusses GP funding after analysis by the Liberal Democrats showed a real-terms fall in practice funding during the past four years. Meanwhile, government figures have also shown that the share of NHS funding going to primary care has fallen to an eight-year low.
They also talk about problems at the primary care interface - the interface between practices and other parts of the NHS, including hospitals, community services and mental health services – and how it is wasting millions of GP appointments every year.
And they look at the latest on measles and MMR vaccine uptake after the UK Health Security Agency last week declared a national incident because of rising cases of measles.
Our good news story this week is about the Friends and Family Test.
This episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower, deputy editor Nick Bostock and senior news reporter Kimberley Hackett. It was produced by Czarina Deen.
Useful links
● Which ICB areas have seen the largest drops in real-terms GP funding?
● RCGP warning as primary care share of NHS funding hits eight-year low
● Solving NHS 'interface' chaos could save 6m GP appointments a year
● NHS England launches catch-up MMR campaign amid rising measles cases
● GPs told to wear PPE when seeing suspected measles cases
More episodes
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35. Dr Katie Bramall-Stainer on shaping a new contract to rebuild general practice
37:23||Season 5, Ep. 35This week Emma speaks to Dr Katie Bramall-Stainer, the chair of the BMA England GP committee, about what the future holds for general practiceKatie explains why this year’s contract deal is the start of a long journey of recovery for general practice and the basis on which to create a more positive future for the profession.Now that the government has agreed to negotiate a completely new GP contract, Katie explains what her priorities will be in those contract negotiations and how the BMA will be making the case for greater investment in general practice.She talks about whether general practice should be directly reimbursed for staff costs, what should replace the Carr-Hill formula and whether it’s now time to define what core services in general practice actually are.Katie also explains why GPs need to keep up the pressure in their area to secure better funding for local enhanced services, how she thinks neighbourhoods could impact on general practice and also why she feels more hopeful about the future than at any other point since she qualified as a GP.This episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower. It was produced by Czarina Deen.Useful linksFull GPonline coverage of the 2025/26 GP contractDefine GP core services or risk unfunded work transfer from hospitals, LMCs to warnBMA guidance on the 2025/26 GP contractBMA safe working guidancePatients first – Why general practice is broken and how can we fix it - BMA manifesto34. Is the ARRS GP scheme a success, how ICB cuts affect general practice
31:47||Season 5, Ep. 34The GPonline team discusses the key news stories affecting general practice.This week the team looks at GP recruitment under the additional roles reimbursement scheme and what new figures tell us about how that initiative is working.They also talk about cuts to integrated care boards, what that could mean for general practice and how the financial constraints within the NHS are already impacting on funding for local services provided by GPs.Our good news story is about funding for research in GP practices.This episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower, deputy editor Nick Bostock and senior reporter Kimberley Hackett. It was produced by Czarina Deen.Useful linksMap: Which areas have recruited the most ARRS GPs?Hundreds of PCNs yet to hire a single ARRS GPICB cuts 'could slow down move to neighbourhood NHS'200 practices could boycott LESs after ICB cut millions from funding offerWhat could ICB cuts mean for general practice?33. How a groundbreaking biomedical data project could transform medicine
38:48||Season 5, Ep. 33This week Emma speaks to Professor Naomi Allen, chief scientist at UK Biobank, a biomedical database and research resource that contains data, information and biological samples from half a million UK participants.Naomi, who is also a professor of epidemiology at the University of Oxford, explains how UK Biobank was established, how it works, and the wealth of data it holds.Naomi also discusses the crucial role primary care data will play and explains how it will be incorporated into UK Biobank in the coming months.And she outlines some of the groundbreaking research that has already been conducted using UK Biobank data and how this could revolutionise patient care in general practice in the future.This episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower. It was produced by Czarina Deen.Useful linksUK Biobank’s websiteDetails on how to access UK Biobank data as a researcherInformation about UK Biobank and GP patient data32. How this year’s contract affects practices’ bottom line, local funding win, NHS satisfaction
36:39||Season 5, Ep. 32On this week’s podcast Emma and Nick talk about how this year’s GP contract will affect practices’ finances and look at details of the advice and guidance enhanced service after final contract documents were published.Kimberley explains how collective action has helped one LMC secure a significant uplift to local enhanced service funding.And Nick talks through the results of this year’s British Social Attitudes survey, which was widely reported and shows satisfaction with the NHS and general practice has continued to fall. He explains why these results don’t tell the whole story of what’s going on in general practice.Our good news story this week is about GP practices signing up to become parkrun practices.This episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower, deputy editor Nick Bostock and senior reporter Kimberley Hackett. It was produced by Czarina Deen.Useful linksGP contract threatens ‘vast gaps’ between practices and ARRS shortfall, expert warnsICB 'interface' groups to oversee expansion of advice and guidanceICB nearly triples LES budget after collective action and LMC talksGPs question major poll showing patient satisfaction at new lowLandmark for GPs as 2,000th practice joins parkrun scheme31. How GPs with extended roles could reshape the NHS
33:28||Season 5, Ep. 31This week’s episode looks at GPs with extended roles and how they could help move services out of hospitals and into the community, reduce waiting times for patients and boost GP retention.Emma is speaking to Dr Charlie Andrews, a GP partner and a GP with an extended role in gastroenterology. Charlie is the driving force behind a programme in the south west of England that trains GPs with extended roles in gastroenterology. This has been the basis for a new framework for GPs with extended roles that has been endorsed by the Primary Care Gastroenterology Society and the British Society of Gastroenterology.Charlie explains how the training programme works and the potential for GPs with extended roles to improve referral pathways and tackle some of the challenges facing the NHS, including workforce issues. He also talks about why the framework should be used by ICBs to develop GPs with extended roles in gastroenterology across England and how it could provide a model for other clinical specialties to develop GPs with extended roles.Charlie is happy for anyone who wants to discuss the training programme or anything to do with GPwER in gastroenterology to contact him by email on charles.andrews@nhs.net. This episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower. It was produced by Czarina Deen.Useful linksThe GPwER in gastroenterology frameworkRCGP information on GPwERs - including links to frameworks for some other specialties30. Green light for GP contract reform, farewell NHS England, alternatives to GP partnership
36:03||Season 5, Ep. 30This week Emma and Nick talk about the government agreeing to negotiate a completely new GP contract within the term of this parliament and what that could mean for the profession.They also discuss the government’s decision to scrap NHS England and how it could affect general practice. And they look at the future of the GP partnership model after an influential health think tank, the Nuffield Trust, suggested that the government should develop alternative models for general practice.Our good news story this week is about patient access to general practice.This episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower and deputy editor Nick Bostock. It was produced by Czarina Deen.Useful linksGovernment commits to talks on major new GP contract to keep 2025/26 deal on trackWhat does NHS England's abolition mean for general practice?Two GPs named in revamped NHS executive teamGovernment 'should develop alternative GP models' amid rapid decline in partnersMap: Which areas are performing best on the government's GP access benchmark?29. Dr Iain Morrison on securing a better future for Scotland's GPs
37:06||Season 5, Ep. 29This week Emma speaks to Dr Iain Morrison, chair of the BMA Scotland GP committee Scotland, about the critical challenges facing general practice in Scotland.In this conversation Iain explains some of the challenges general practice in Scotland is facing as a result of problems with the 2018 GP contract, the impact of underfunding, and the growing crisis in the GP job market.He explains what needs to happen to address these issues and the prospect of GPs in Scotland taking industrial action in the coming year unless the government takes steps to increase funding – and discusses why GP practices should adopt the BMA safe working guidance.This episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower. It was produced by Czarina Deen.Useful linksBMA safe workload guidance for GPs in Scotland'Devastated' practices lay off staff after five-figure premises cost hike - GPonline story about the premises problems facing practices in LothianGP practices in Scotland promised £10.5m to boost capacityScottish GPs call for national fix to help IMG doctors secure visasTwo thirds of Scottish GPs ready to disrupt services through industrial action28. What does the 2025/26 GP contract mean for general practice?
40:28||Season 5, Ep. 28This week Emma and Nick look at the GP contract deal for England for 2025/26. They discuss what exactly is in the deal and what it means for GP practices in the year ahead, in particular what it could mean for practice finances and whether changes to the additional roles reimbursement scheme will address the GP jobs crisis. They also talk about what happens now with collective action and the BMA’s push for more significant contract reform in the coming years.This episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower and deputy editor Nick Bostock. It was produced by Czarina Deen.Useful linksRead all of our GP contract coverage hereWhat's in the GP contract for 2025/26?Early-career GPs spell out how a new contract can secure their futureWhat does the pause in collective action really mean for GPs?27. An evidence-based approach to addressing health inequalities
29:24||Season 5, Ep. 27This week Emma speaks to Dr John Ford and GP Dr Liam Loftus from the Health Equity Evidence Centre at Queen Mary University in London about health inequalities and how frontline clinicians, system leaders and policymakers can make evidence-based decisions to tackle inequality in healthcare.John and Liam discuss how the Health Equity Evidence Centre is making the evidence on what works when it comes to addressing health inequalities more accessible.The centre uses machine learning to analyse the vast amount of research and literature that’s available and the team at the centre turns that information into actionable insights for GPs, other frontline clinicians, healthcare managers and policymakers.John and Liam explain how this all works in practice, the resources they have available and how this can help GPs, practices and primary care networks in their day to day work. They also talk about projects they are currently working on, including how GP funding inequalities can be addressed, and how they hope to establish a solid evidence base for what works when it comes to tackling health inequalities.This episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower. It was produced by Czarina Deen.Useful linksHealth Equity Evidence CentreOutdated GP funding formula leaves practices in deprived areas with 10% less fundingTalking General Practice episode with Dr Becks Fisher from the Nuffield Trust on - How can we make GP funding fairer?