North Durham GPs’ private contract referral ‘disgraceful’, says MP

Richard Vautrey, from the BMA, said: "I'm a bit concerned if the clinical commissioning group does not believe that patients should be fully involved and fully informed about what is happening for their care.

Tyne & Wear

gp-turn-to-privateThe move is aimed at reducing hospital admissions

 

There is concern that patients in County Durham have not been notified that GPs must now ask a private company to decide on referrals to specialists.

North Durham Clinical Commissioning Group has awarded a contract to About Health, which will advise on the best way to manage a range of conditions.

A local MP said it was “disgraceful” the system had been put in place without a public consultation.

Health bosses said the move would save money, and GPs had been consulted.

Under the contract, doctors across north Durham will write to About Health for advice on whether a patient should be sent to a specialist or whether they should try other treatments.

labour-mp-roberta-blackman-woodsLabour MP Roberta Blackman-Woods has called for the contract to be cancelled

 

The conditions include cardiology, gynaecology, dermatology, or gastroenterology, but will not relate to suspected cancer or other urgent cases.

Durham Labour MP Roberta Blackman-Woods has said that taking the GPs’ right to refer away is wrong and wants the contract immediately scrapped.

She said: “It is absolutely disgraceful that they have gone ahead with this with no public consultation.

“I am going to demand that the put a halt on this … because I honestly believe it could compromise patient safety.”

Richard Vautrey, from the BMA, said: “I’m a bit concerned if the clinical commissioning group does not believe that patients should be fully involved and fully informed about what is happening for their care.

“When a referral is being made or advice is being sought patients should understand who that advice is being taken from, and whether they are having the right expertise to be able to provide that advice, and whether the GP believes it is in the right interest for a patients at that time.”

The North Durham Clinical Commissioning Group said that GPs had been involved in the process, and the aim was to diagnose conditions earlier, get patients to specialists earlier, and reduce hospital admissions.

 

 

Credit: BBC News

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