I spend most of my time at present working with a GP Federation in North East London. What has become clear in recent days is that the crisis we are in is a key moment for the federation. The role of the federation is, and always has been, explicitly to support member practices and delivery of care to their practice populations. If the federation cannot support practices right now at the time when they need it most, I don’t think it ever will be able to.
This situation is not unique to the federation I am working with. I think the challenge equally applies to other federations, to super-partnerships, and even to Primary Care Networks. If there was ever a time when working together could add value, then it is now.
Individual practices are working extremely hard. They are trying to get to get to grips with whole new ways of working – some practices have had to move to full telephone triage in a week, when many practices have taken years to make such a shift. Every day there is a new challenge, with different staff off sick or isolating. The priority is simply to make it through to the end of each day.
What is the role of at scale general practice? Things are changing at such a pace that what is needed today might be completely different to what is needed in only a couple of weeks’ time. But for right now, the role appears to be threefold. First, identifying what immediate support can be provided to practices. That could be help with ordering equipment, setting up IT equipment or establishing remote working, help obtaining locums, and directly helping when a practice goes into crisis (as some practices inevitably will).
Second, preparing for what is coming next. We know the scale of the challenge will increase week on week, certainly for some time to come. What worked last week may not work next week. Local at scale general practice has to think about what is coming next, and what needs to be put in place to enable practices to cope. This might be ensuring robust escalation processes are in place between and across practices, the introduction of “hot” sites, establishing an at-scale visiting service, plus things we have not even thought of yet. Practices are (rightly) focussing on today, so at-scale general practice has to make sure it is doing the thinking about tomorrow.
Third, ensuring there is two-way communication with practices. Practices need to have the up to date information on what is happening locally, and at the same time need somewhere to raise questions and concerns. At-scale practice needs to provide that visible local leadership for practices which is so critical at a time when individual practices could easily feel isolated and alone.
But the challenge this presents for the at-scale organisations themselves should not be underestimated. They often operate with a very limited number of staff, and clinical leaders in more or less full time roles in practices themselves. They will also have their own internal challenges with sickness and isolation. Meeting this challenge will not be easy.
In the coming weeks on the podcast I am going to be talking to Tara Humphrey who is working with a PCN, and we will both share our experiences of working with a PCN and a federation to see whether at scale general practice is able to rise to the huge challenge ahead.
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