Monday 19 August 2013

Patients to face longer waits for GP appointments, survey suggests

70% of family doctors say waiting times will increase More than seven in ten family doctors think patients will face longer waiting times to see them over the next two years, according to a major survey of Britain’s GPs. Over 70% of GPs surveyed for the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) said they think their patients will have to wait for an appointment, and almost a half (47%) say that they have cut back on the range of services they provide. The survey shows that more than 80% of family doctors say that they now have insufficient resources to provide high quality patient care. As well as the reduction in patient services, 39% of respondents to the ComRes poll also said they had cut practice staff and over half had experienced difficulty recruiting and retaining GPs. Four in five GPs said they were concerned that it will become increasingly difficult to deliver continuity of care to vulnerable elderly people, while almost three quaretrs (72%) say that the amount of time they are able to spend on frontline patient care has been reduced as a result of the new clinical commissioning responsibilities they have been given. The RCGP said it is now calling on all four Governments across the UK for an emergency package of additional investment for general practice before there are disastrous consequences for patients. RCGP chair Dr Clare Gerada said the survey results “paint a bleak picture” for patients, the profession and the future of general practice. She said: “GPs are grappling with a ‘double whammy’ of spiralling workloads and dwindling resources, and big cracks are now starting to appear in the care and services that we can deliver for our patients.” Read more about Private Medical Insurance

Thursday 3 January 2013

Work has positive impact on mental health of young people, report reveals

Joblessness leads to 'spiral' of depression, charity warns The positive contribution that work makes to the mental health of young people is outlined in a report published today. A survey of more than 2,000 16-to-25 year olds reveals that young people not in employment, education or training (NEETs) are significantly more vulnerable to mental ill-health than their peers who are in work. While an estimated 27% of young people in employment say they 'always' or 'often' feel depressed or down, that figure rises to 48% across the NEET population. The survey, carried out for the Prince's Trust charity, shows a "worrying" discrepancy, according to Richard Parish, chief executive of the Royal Society of Public Health. Parish said: "These unemployed young people need support to regain their self-worth and, ultimately, get them back in the workplace." The Insurance Service