We have had quite a week in general practice. The LMC conference voted to “reject the PCN DES as it is currently written” and yet, frankly, it feels like an irrelevance given the unfolding situation with regards COVID-19.
The irony of course is that, just when the profession has chosen to reject PCNs, the need to work in groups of practices has become more important than ever before. The reality is that many practices will have to close for periods of time over the coming weeks, and so right now need to be working and planning with their neighbouring practices to be prepared for when the time comes.
In turn, this reinforces the point that those who voted against the PCN DES were making. If Primary Care Networks were genuinely about strengthening core general practice (and there is no better example of the need for this than right now) they would have voted for them. It is the sense that, as the LMC motion put it, they are “a trojan horse to transfer work from secondary care to primary care” that has caused the disillusionment, not the idea of PCNs or working together per se.
Let’s see where we end up, but it may be that when all this is done and dusted we have much stronger, supportive networks of practices, regardless of whether or not they have signed up to the PCN DES.
At the same time practices have been asked to move to a total triage system (whether phone or online), and to undertake all care that can be done remotely through remote means. The threat caused by coronavirus means that practices are very keen to move to such a system, to reduce the risk to their own staff as much as they can.
Now this is in sharp contrast to the situation we have had previously, where there has been a relatively slow rollout of first telephone triage and then e-consultations. What situation will we be in a few months down the line when practices have grown used to operating primarily via remote consultations? Even at this early stage it is hard to envisage a full regression to the point we were in maybe only as recently as last week.
So right before our very eyes general practice is changing at a pace that it has never changed at before. It is change borne out of the necessity and challenge the current crisis is placing upon us. What the service will look like once the dust has settled none of us know, but my guess is general practice will never look the same again.
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