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Talking General Practice
Eliminating hepatitis C - the role of general practice
Emma speaks to GP Dr Rik Fijten and consultant hepatologist Dr Kosh Agarwal about the NHS in England’s drive to eliminate hepatitis C.
The World Health Organization is aiming to eliminate Hepatitis C globally by 2030 and NHS England wants England to become the first country to do this, with a target to achieve this aim by next year.
In this podcast Rik and Kosh explains how the NHS is doing against this target and the important role that general practice has to play in helping to eliminate hepatitis C.
Rik explains what his role as a hepatitis C GP champion involves and what GPs and their teams can do in their practices to contribute to this work, and Kosh discusses what advances in treatment mean for patients and the transformative impact they’ve had.
They also explain other aspects of the programme that has helped it become a real success story and discuss whether the approach NHS England has used for Hepatitis C could work for other conditions.
This episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower. It was produced by Czarina Deen.
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18. How the NHS can get the best from social prescribing
37:24||Season 5, Ep. 18This week Emma speaks to chief executive of the National Academy for Social Prescribing Charlotte Osborn Forde and Dr Radha Modgil, a GP and TV and radio broadcaster, who is also an ambassador for the National Academy for Social Prescribing.In this conversation Charlotte and Radha explain some of the evidence to support the use of social prescribing, what works in projects on the ground and the important role GPs have to play within social prescribing.They also discuss some of the challenges facing social prescribing, what practices and PCNs can do to ensure their social prescribing initiatives are a success and how they would like to see social prescribing develop in the coming years as part of the government’s 10-year plan for the NHS.This episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower. It was produced by Czarina Deen.Useful linksFrom GPonline - The evidence to support the use of social prescribingFrom GPonline - The benefits of green prescribing in the NHSNASP report - The impact of social prescribing on health service use and costsNASP report - Building the economic case for social prescribingPreventing and Tackling Mental Ill Health through Green Social Prescribing Project - government evaluation17. Winter pressures, falling locum pay, how one area transformed its patient per GP ratio
30:34||Season 5, Ep. 17The GPonline team talks about some of the challenges the NHS could face this winter and what all this means for general practice.They also look at how the GP jobs crisis is affecting locum GPs - and discuss some worrying signs that the lack of detail on any support practices are likely to receive on employer’s national insurance is having a devastating impact on some practices.And they talk about whether GPs in Wales and Scotland could be following their English counterparts and launching some form of industrial action in the push for a better GP contract.This week’s good news story is about an ICB area in England that is bucking the trend and has seen a big fall in the number of patients per GP over the past two years and what they’ve done to achieve this.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 linksGP job shortage forces locums to cut fees and take on private workARRS jobs have not solved employment crisis for newly-qualified GPs, trainers warnGPs fear 'domino effect' as practice set to close over NI hikeTwo thirds of Scottish GPs ready to disrupt services through industrial actionWelsh GPs head for referendum after BMA rejects 2024/25 contract offerHow part of England bucked the national trend and grew its GP workforce16. How can we solve problems at the primary/secondary care interface?
34:59||Season 5, Ep. 16NHS England has estimated that practices spend around 10-20% of their time on 'lower-value administrative work and work generated by issues at the primary-secondary care interface', so what can we do to address this?This week Emma speaks to GP Dr Jonathan Griffiths the associate medical director for Primary Care at NHS Cheshire and Merseyside ICB about work he’s been doing in his area to solve some of these challenges.In this conversation Jonathan explains some of the main problems that happen at the interface between primary and secondary care, how they are aiming to address these in Cheshire and Merseyside and the key things he’s learned through doing this work.He also talks about why it is so important for the NHS to look at this as a system-wide issue and what the government and NHS England need to do centrally to help support local efforts to address these problems – as well as how this work applies to the interface with other sectors such as community services and mental health.This episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower. It was produced by Czarina Deen.Useful links● NHS Cheshire and Merseyside Consensus on the Primary and Secondary Care Interface● RCGP Primary-Secondary Care Interface Guidance - which is based on work in Cheshire and Merseyside● Academy of Medical Royal Colleges publication - General practice and secondary care: Working better together - provides multiple examples of work that is aiming to improve working between primary and secondary care15. Will GPs step up collective action? Plus the growing gap in underdoctored areas
35:10||Season 5, Ep. 15This week Nick and Emma discuss whether GPs are likely to step up collective action after GPs at last week’s England LMCs conference voted in favour of balloting the profession on ‘more significant’ industrial action. GPs at the event also voted to hold a special conference on the impact that the rise in employers' national insurance contributions, and Nick and Emma explain what that might mean and how it could affect collective action.They also discuss some of the other debates that were of interest from the conference - on the GP jobs crisis and integrated neighbourhood teams. And they talk about the latest data from GPonline’s GP Workforce Tracker and what that tells us about the state of the GP workforce in England.This week’s good news story is about a report that sets out the evidence to support the use of social prescribing from the National Academy of Social Prescribing.This episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower and deputy editor Nick Bostock. It was produced by Czarina Deen.Useful linksGPs back call to ballot profession on 'more significant' industrial actionBudget threatens 'collapse' of general practice as LMCs back special conferencePractices could be forced to switch salaried GPs for locums to avoid NI costsWhere in England are patients per GP rising fastest?GP Workforce Tracker: How does your ICB compare?The evidence to support the use of social prescribing - from GPonlineNational Academy for Social Prescribing report14. What does the future hold for GP premises?
24:40||Season 5, Ep. 14This week Emma speaks to Kent GP Dr Gaurav Gupta who is a member of the BMA England GP committee and the committee lead for premises.In this conversation Gaurav talks about the terrible state of GP premises in England, how we’ve reached this point and why the government needs to invest in the primary care estate if it is serious about growing the workforce, improving the NHS and moving more care into the community.He also explains what the new premises cost directions could mean for practices, the problems facing practices based in NHS Property Services buildings and why GP premises ownership should still have an important role in future plans for the primary care estate.This episode is presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower. It was produced by Czarina Deen.Useful linksBMA information on the recent NHS Property Services legal casesOne in three GPs say their premises and computers are not fit for purposeGPs could have premises developments fully funded as new cost directions publishedWhat do the Premises Costs Directions 2024 mean for practices? - from our sister site GP Business13. Fallout from the budget, how the job shortage has hit GP pay
30:49||Season 5, Ep. 13Emma and NIck discuss the fallout from the budget and what the increase in employer’s national insurance contributions will mean for GP practices, including looking at the results from our own survey on this issue.They look ahead to next week’s England local medical committee conference and some of the topics that are up for debate and what they tell us about some of the key concerns facing the profession.And they discuss salaried GP pay, after warnings that the GP jobs crisis is driving down levels of pay for salaried GPs.This week’s good news story is about ONS survey data that suggests patient satisfaction with general practice is rising rapidly.This episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower and deputy editor Nick Bostock. It was produced by Czarina Deen.Useful linksBudget threatens to wipe out half of 2024/25 GP contract upliftNational insurance hike could cost 2m GP appointments, analysis findsGP jobs crisis is driving down rates of pay, BMA warnsPatient satisfaction with general practice rising rapidly, ONS data suggest12. How can we make GP funding fairer? With Dr Becks Fisher from the Nuffield Trust
36:25||Season 5, Ep. 12This week Emma speaks to GP Dr Becks Fisher who is director of policy and research at the health think tank the Nuffield Trust.Becks has long been an advocate for overhauling GP funding so it better reflects deprivation and she explains why this is so important and how the government could go about doing this.She also explains her views on the government’s plans to move care from hospitals to the community, create a neighbourhood NHS and incentivise continuity of care, discusses what the Nuffield Trust wants to see in the 10-year plan for the NHS, and offers advice to other GPs who might be interested in a career in policy work.This episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower. It was produced by Czarina Deen.Useful linksHow many more patients per GP are there in deprived areas?Practices in deprived areas have 17% more patients per GP and more chronic illnessRCGP demands overhaul of 'all GP funding streams' to cut inequalityThe Nuffield TrustNext Generation GP11. Is the GP workforce turning a corner? Plus what the budget means for general practice
33:12||Season 5, Ep. 11This week the GPonline team looks at the GP workforce in England after latest figures show it has risen to a five-year high despite an ongoing jobs crisis that has left many GPs struggling to find work. They also discuss what’s happening with the GP additional roles reimbursement scheme jobs and why the RCGP is calling for a complete overhaul of the NHS long-term workforce plan. And they talk about this week's budget and what it means for general practice and the NHS more widely.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 linksGP workforce hits five-year high despite ongoing jobs crisisJobs crisis leaves GP on universal credit and registrars 'failing exams deliberately'What do the emerging ARRS jobs for newly-qualified GPs look like?Rip up NHS workforce plan and create bold GP retention strategy, demands RCGPBudget risks 'pushing GPs towards the exit' as practice costs riseBudget delivers real-terms NHS funding boost but higher costs for GP practices10. Labour’s GP MP Dr Simon Opher on adjusting to life in parliament
33:30||Season 5, Ep. 10Emma speaks to GP Dr Simon Opher, who was elected as the Labour MP for Stroud in Gloucestershire in the general election in July this year. Simon was a GP in his constituency for 30 years before standing for parliament.In this interview he talks about why he wanted to become an MP, what being an MP involves day to day and some of the challenges he’s faced in this new role – including going from being in one of the most trusted professions as a GP to the least trusted as a politician.Simon also talks about what role he thinks general practice will play in Labour’s plans for a neighbourhood NHS, how he hopes general practice will improve over the course of this parliament and why he thinks the GP partnership model is the key to successful general practice.And he explains why he sees standing up for general practice as central to his new job.This episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower. It was produced by Czarina Deen.Useful linksGovernment opens public consultation to shape 10-year NHS planGovernment plans to ‘bulldoze bureaucracy’ to free up GP timeLabour’s new GP MP says primary care will be prioritised for any new NHS funding