Talking General Practice

GPonline.com
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Dec 15, 2023 • 36min

Supporting international medical graduate GPs and GP registrars

This week Emma speaks to Dr Sylvia Kama-Kieghe, a GP from Sheffield who is vice chair of the RCGP South Yorkshire and North Trent Faculty and a chair of the RCGP Northern Faculties International Medical Graduate steering group.They talk about the challenges that international medical graduates - or IMG - GPs face and what the NHS and general practice can do to support them.Around half of the doctors who enter GP training each year are now IMGs, which means they received their initial medical qualification outside the UK.Sylvia herself qualified as a doctor in Nigeria. In this episode she talks about her own move to the UK in 2004, and some of the difficulties IMG doctors face in the UK, including racism, long-standing problems related to visas and the challenges of practising medicine in a completely different country and culture.She also explains why the RCGP Northern Faculties IMG steering group was set up and what it is hoping to achieve, and offers some practical advice on how practices can best support IMG doctors. It was produced by Czarina DeenUseful linksIMG group on the RCGP members’ forumE-learning for health’s guide to induction for IMG doctorsRCGP overseas doctors guideBMA guide on becoming a tier 2 sponsor for GP practicesNHS guide for IMG doctorsMost regions of Health Education England will have information for IMG doctors working in their area , including:Yorkshire and the Humber - you can find the IMG guidebook that Sylvia mentioned in the podcast hereEast of EnglandLondonNorth WestSouth WestInformation from Health Education ScotlandInformation from Health Education and Improvement Wales Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Dec 8, 2023 • 38min

Where next for the GP contract, plus Labour’s plan for neighbourhood health centres

This week Emma and Nick look at what we know about what the BMA in England might be looking to achieve in contract negotiations, how the current deal that’s on the table for consultants could affect talks, and whether continuity should be a contractual requirement.They also discuss Labour’s plan for neighbourhood health centres and what the party might want them to achieve.Our good news story this week is about a British GP's success Down Under.This episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower and deputy editor Nick Bostock. It was produced by Czarina Deen.Useful linksWhat questions is the BMA asking GPs to shape its vision for general practice?Next GP contract 'must signal hope', GP committee chair warnsGovernment must match consultants' pay offer in new contract for GPsLabour plans neighbourhood walk-in GP centres open seven days a weekNew contract that enforces continuity would make GPs and patients safer, says watchdogGP conquers 'Everest of competitive mullet growing' Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Dec 1, 2023 • 34min

Supporting neurodivergent doctors and staff in general practice

Emma talks to GPs Dr Beckie Akroyd and Dr Catherine Bell about neurodiversity in the medical profession and what general practice can do to better support doctors and other staff who are neurodivergent.Beckie is the GP Lead for Autistic Doctors International, a support and advocacy organisation, and until recently Catherine was an Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Fellow for Derbyshire’s GP Task Force focusing on supporting neurodivergent staff working in general practice.Beckie and Catherine talk about their own experiences of being neurodivergent, the challenges neurodivergent doctors can face, including stigma, and why it is important that we frame neurodiversity positively and focus on what people can do rather than what they can’t.Beckie and Catherine also have lots of practical tips for practices on how they can support neurodivergent staff and advice for anyone listening who may be neurodivergent about how to approach conversations with your employer and places to get additional support.This episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower. It was produced by Czarina Deen.Useful linksAutistic Doctors InternationalAccess to Work supportSociety of Occupational Medicine: Evaluating and supporting neurodifferences at workCatherine’s article on neurodiversity in the general practice workforce - available for RCGP membersAcas - Neurodiversity at workBeckie and Catherine’s full Linktree with links to all the resources they recommended during their talk at the RCGP conference. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Nov 24, 2023 • 30min

Where are patients per GP rising fastest, impact of minimum wage rise, GP premises funding

Emma and Nick look at the current state of the GP workforce and changes over the past year. We’ve just undertaken a major update of GPonline’s GP Workforce Tracker, which we launched a year ago, and Nick talks through some of the key findings from that work.They talk about the uplift to the minimum wage that is due to happen in April and what this will mean for practice, and discuss GP premises, in particular some of the problems relating to funding reaching practices when there are housing developments in their area.And, following the recent cabinet reshuffle, they look at the arrival of a new secretary of state at the Department of Health and Social Care and what this could mean in the months ahead.Our good news story is about NHS England’s pledge to eliminate cervical cancer by 2040.This episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower and deputy editor Nick Bostock. It was produced by Czarina Deen.Useful linksGPonline’s GP Workforce TrackerWhere in England are patients per GP rising fastest?GPs fear practice closures as minimum wage hike threatens major rise in costsChancellor to investigate delays in GP premises funding from housing developmentWho is new health and social care secretary Victoria Atkins?NHS England sets target to eliminate cervical cancer Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Nov 17, 2023 • 37min

Improving early cancer diagnosis

Emma speaks to Dr Sarah Taylor and Dr Rebecca Leon, who are GPs with a special interest in cancer, about early cancer diagnosis.Both Sarah and Rebecca have portfolio careers and one of their roles is as GP leads at GatewayC, an organisation backed by the NHS in England and Wales and leading cancer charities that is aiming to boost early cancer diagnosis. As part of this work they host the GPs Talk Cancer podcast.In this conversation Sarah and Rebecca explain how the pandemic and the current backlog of care have impacted on cancer diagnosis and treatment, whether the NHS can hit ambitious targets on early cancer diagnosis, and what recent changes to national targets mean.We also talk about inequalities in early cancer diagnosis, new tests to detect cancer early, and the importance of screening. Rebecca and Sarah also have some practical advice based on their own experiences and conversations with experts that can help GPs ensure they don’t miss a cancer diagnosis.This episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower. It was produced by Czarina Deen.Useful links●     GatewayC●     GPs Talk Cancer podcast●     The NHS Galleri trial Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Nov 10, 2023 • 30min

Physician associate concerns, RCGP definition of a GP, LMCs to debate GP contract changes

This week on the podcast Emma and Nick talk about physician associates after the BMA GP committee in England voted in favour of a strongly worded motion that called for an immediate freeze on recruiting these roles in general practice. They also look at plans for regulating PAs by the GMC, which is also causing concern in the medical profession.They also discuss the RCGP’s new definition of what a GP is, and they look ahead to the England local medical committee conference at the end of this month and some of the motions relating to the GP contract that are up for debate.Our good news story this week is about prescribing of DOACs in primary care and the impact this has had on stroke prevention.This episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower and deputy editor Nick Bostock. It was produced by Czarina Deen.Useful links                                               BMA demands halt to 'increasing trend' of PAs substituting GPs​​Doctors warn GMC plans to regulate physician associates are 'unsafe'Supervising physician associates – what GPs need to know - advice from the MDUGPs are 'consultants in general practice', says RCGPGP prescribing shift has stopped thousands of strokes, says NHS chief Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Nov 3, 2023 • 30min

How health creation can help GP practices tackle inequalities

Emma speaks to Surrey GPs Dr Gillian Orrow, Dr Tabassum Siddiqui and Dr Richard Wright, about how a programme called Growing Health Together, which Gillian co-founded, is helping general practice and other partners in the local health system to tackle health inequalities.One of the key aims of Growing Health Together is to create a more sustainable health and care system, by reducing demand in primary and secondary care through health creation, prevention, and early intervention.It is based on the idea of health creation and this episode looks at what health creation is, some of the local schemes that Growing Health Together has helped to establish and how this is all benefiting local people.Gillian, Tabassum and Richard also explain how this work fits in with what their primary care networks are trying to achieve and the value of GPs having funded time to spend in their local communities to help understand the challenges some of their patients face and work out solutions that can help.This episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower and produced by Czarina Deen.Useful linksGrowing Health TogetherThe YouTube video explaining some of the work Growing Health Together is doing is here - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FfW5cjpvklU Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Oct 27, 2023 • 34min

RCGP plan to save general practice, where next for the GP contract, online access to records

Emma and Nick reflect on last week’s RCGP annual conference, in particular the details of the college’s manifesto to save general practice and the Labour party’s reaction to it.They look ahead to what might happen to the GP contract in England as we come towards the end of the current five-year deal, as well as discuss pay rises for practice nurses and the collapse of contract talks in Wales. And they look at online access to patient records, a contractual requirement in England that comes into effect next week, and some of the concerns around this.Our good news story this week is about patient satisfaction with 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 linksRead all the news from the RCGP conference hereGeneral practice could see 'new contract for a generation' from 2028ARRS model should be 'turned on its head', says BMA GP leaderUnions warn not all GP practices can afford 6% staff pay riseGeneral practice in Wales 'at risk of collapse' after contract talks break downRemote access to GP records risks domestic abuse survivors' safety, BMA warns Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Oct 18, 2023 • 28min

RCGP chair Professor Kamila Hawthorne

Talking General Practice speaks to RCGP chair Professor Kamila Hawthorne ahead of the college’s annual conference in Glasgow this week.In this conversation Professor Hawthorne explains what needs to be done to help tackle spiralling workload in general practice, how we can retain more GPs in the workforce and what changes could happen in the short term to help turn the current situation in general practice around.She also talks about how the college hopes to influence political parties in the run up to the next general election, whether the RCGP’s new exam will help tackle differential attainment and why, despite all of the current challenges, general practice is still a great place to work.GPonline at the RCGP annual conferenceThe college will be launching a manifesto for general practice at its conference and you will be able to read more about this on GPonline on Thursday morning.GPonline is delighted to once again be the college’s media partner for the RCGP annual conference, which takes place on 19 and 20 October. We’ll be in Glasgow reporting all the news from the conference - visit www.gponline.com/rcgpThis episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower. It was produced by Czarina Deen.Useful links●     GPs seeing cases of malnutrition and rickets as cost-of-living crisis hits patient health●     No extra funding for general practice as government unveils £200m winter support●     An introduction to the simulated consultation assessment (SCA) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Oct 13, 2023 • 25min

Have golden hellos revived GP partnerships, GP funding across the UK, flu vaccination

Emma and Nick look at the New to Partnership Scheme – a three-year initiative that aimed to boost the number of partners in England – and ask, has it actually worked?They discuss what’s going on with funding for general practice across the UK and what the uplifts agreed for 2023/24 mean for practices. And they talk about the latest appointment data for general practice in England and what it tells us about the pressure practices are under as we head towards winter.This week’s good news story is about flu vaccination.This episode was presented by GPonline editor Emma Bower and deputy editor Nick Bostock. It was produced by Czarina Deen.Useful links●     Golden hello scheme brings in almost 3,000 new GP partners●     What impact have 'golden hello' payments had on GP partnerships?●     Cashflow warning as 6% uplift money delayed until November●     Northern Ireland GP funding slashed despite 'absolute crisis'●     'Disappointing' uplift falls short of 6% pay rise promised to GPs in Scotland●     Dispensing practices face cashflow crisis as 'yo-yoing' fees fall sharply●     GP practices delivering 150,000 extra appointments per day compared with 2019●     Flu vaccination prevented 25,000 hospitalisations last year Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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