The terms of the agreement
Contract held between PCT | Old General Medical Services contract Individual GP | New General Medical Services contract GP Practice |
Funding for core services | Individual GP patient list provides a small fee per patient registered and a fee for each item of service provided. There was also a Basic Practice Allowance. | Each practice receives its main funding for the provision of essential services via a “global sum” based on the weighted needs of the practice’s pooled patient list. The global sum payment is based on a national allocation formula, calculated according to lists size and adjusted for the age and needs of the local population. This is supplemented by a Minimum Practice Income Guarantee which was negotiated to ensure that practice funding was not reduced in the first few years of the contract. |
Service delivery | GPs can claim for a limited range of additional services. | Flexible structure allows practices and Primary care Trust to opt in to provide a portfolio of enhanced services, which can be innovative or tailored to meet specific patient need. |
Out of hours | GPs responsible for out of hours service but many delegated this to other providers. | The new contract defined “core hours” (8am to 6.30pm) as when practices are responsible for providing a full range of primary medical care services. Responsibility for out-of-hours urgent care was removed. Practices can opt to provide out-of-hours urgent care under a separate contract (defined as Monday to Friday 6.30pm to 8am, weekends and bank holidays). |
Quality rewards | Some small sums available for quality rewards for example some payments for cervical cytology. There was also a range of quality schemes in the later years of old GMS, including ‘Investing in Primary care’ schemes. | Practices are financially incentivised for delivering measurable levels of quality in patient care, via the evidence-based Quality and Outcomes Framework (QOF). Between 10–15 per cent of the new money tied to the contract is available to reward practices for providing higher quality services. |
Staffing | Funding follows GP, so no incentive to develop other staff. | Encourages development of different skill mix within a practice by linking some funding to activity carried out by nurses and other practice staff (through the Quality and Outcome Framework). |
Source: Department of Health | ||
How much has the new contract cost?
| 2003-04 £ million | 2004-05 £ million | 2005-06 £ million | Additional cost of the new contract £ million |
Gross Investment Guarantee | 5,611 | 6,211 | 6,918 | - |
Department’s Allocation | n/a | 6,802 | 7,483 | - |
Actual Spend by PcTs | 5,811 | 6,957 | 7,734 | - |
Difference between spend and Gross Investment Guarantee | 200 | 746 | 816 | 1,762 |
Difference between spend and allocation | n/a | 155 | 251 | 406 |
Source: Department of Health | ||||
Notes
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How much are GPs now earning as a result of the new contract?
Has the new contract benefited the NHS?
| Expected Benefits | Progress to date |
Increasing NHS Productivity | Gross productivity gains (above a do-nothing scenario) of 1.5 per cent in the first year, rising to 4.5 per cent within three years and continuing for up to eight years. | Progress has not been demonstrated. Estimates of NHS productivity produced by the Office for National Statistics suggest productivity has fallen since the new contract was introduced in 2003. Estimates for family health services suggest a fall in productivity (adjusted for quality) of 2.8 per cent between 2003 and 2004; and 2.2 per cent between 2004 and 2005. There are no quality adjusted productivity estimates for 2006 but non-adjusted productivity measures show an improvement in productivity between 2005 and 2006. Proxy indicators such as activity show that the number of patients seen at GP practices has increased at a much lower rate than costs (paragraphs 3.2–3.8). |
Re-designing the services around patients | Basing allocations on the need of the local population with flexibility to shape services around local needs. | Progress has not yet been demonstrated. The Minimum Income Practice Guarantee assured historical funding for GP practices (paragraph 1.14) and did not re-direct funding to deprived areas. Academic commentary and other statistics (such as mortality data) suggest QOF has not yet addressed inequalities. QOF performance is only slightly lower in deprived areas but is more pronounced in indicators such as supporting patients with mental health problems. |
| Greater freedoms for patients to see their GP of choice and choose their own length of consultation. Patient satisfaction will be measured and rewarded. | Progress has been made on aspects of access but there is still scope for improvement. 88 per cent of patients are able to book an appointment with their GP of choice and average length of GP consultations has increased. [Note 1] However, the ‘24/48’ target has created some perverse incentives with some GP practices not allowing patients to book appointments more than 48 hours in advance. QOF includes points for measuring satisfaction but does not reward GPs for high satisfaction. current patient satisfaction remains in line with satisfaction rates recorded prior to implementation (paragraphs 3.22–3.27). |
| Incentivise and provide resources for the modernisation of infrastructure supporting the delivery of primary care, including modern and fit-forpurpose premises. | Some progress has been made in providing extra resources for premises although the new GMS contract has no specific mechanism in place to incentivise practices to improve GP premises. The Department provided more money to spend on premises, PcTs spent less than the Department allocated (figures 13 and 14). |
Designing the right jobs | Continued improvements in skill mix in practices, encouraging the roles of nurse practitioners and health care assistants. | Some progress has been made on changing skill mix but the impact on value for money or patient care is not yet clear. The number of consultations and extent of work carried out by nurses has grown and nurses are carrying out an increasing percentage of routine work previously undertaken by GPs including a large proportion of QOF work. This leaves GPs free to see more complex cases. Practice staff report that morale has been affected by the increase in their workload and that they have not seen the same financial rewards as GP partners (paragraphs 3.11–3.13). |
High quality care and linking pay and performance | The quality and outcomes framework will place greater emphasis on rewarding high quality services, rewarding outputs and quality rather than inputs. Local flexibility to further reward high performers. | Some progress has been made in introducing a unique system of linking funding and quality through the QOF but there remains room for improving its design to reflect outcomes. It is too early to say conclusively if the QOF has led to improved outcomes for patients but some evidence exists to suggest that modest improvement has been made in controlling asthma and diabetes. [Note 2] The quality and outcome framework primarily measures processes of care but these inputs are linked to clinical evidence that they will result in improved patient outcomes. There is no clear strategy for the development of the QOF and there is room for more local flexibility (paragraphs 3.14–3.17). |
| Promote a culture of clinical governance [Note 3] and service improvement by explicitly rewarding GP time commitment on clinical governance, accreditation and CPD. | Some progress has been made in incentivising GPs to improve clinical governance through the QOF. GPs spend more time on clinical governance and cPD which is incentivised in the QOF. However, the NAO Report “Progress in implementing clinical governance in primary care” noted that whilst GPs have systems and processes for clinical governance in place these are not as extensive as at PcT level. [Note 4] In addition the absence of contracts for some practice staff undermines one of the principles of clinical governance. |
Reduced administration | Expected Benefits continued Less complex system for fees and allowances. | Some progress has been made by introducing a less complex system of fees. However the majority of GPs and PcTs still believe the new contract has not reduced administration (76 per cent of GPs and 58 per cent of PcTs), largely because of the need to manage the QOF and a portfolio of Enhanced Services. |
Extending the range of patient services | Reducing the pressure on secondary care services and allow for greater continuity of patient care through further development of GP specialist services. | Some progress has been made in delivering new services. The new contract gives PcTs the necessary levers to commission locally enhanced services that would have been previously delivered in secondary care, although not all PcTs have yet realised the full benefits of enhanced services (paragraph 4.23). The introduction of the new contracts has coincided with an increase in emergency hospital admissions which is not necessarily attributable to the new contract (a rise of 36.2 per cent of total admissions since 2002-03). See Figure 25. |
| Addressin funding inequalities will mean practices are more likely to offer a fuller range of services and reduce the need for patients to travel to hospital for diagnostic tests and treatment. | Some progress has been made and the new contract offers the chance for GPs to offer wider range of services away from hospital for example Dermatology. However, few PcTs have maximised the opportunity to commission more locally enhanced services based on patient need (paragraphs 4.23–4.30). |
Overall measure of participation | Increase the number of full-time equivalent GPs by 300 in the first year of the contract and by 550 within three years. | Good progress has been made. The number of GPs has increased by 2,623 (full time equivalents) in the first three years of the contract. There are a number of other Departmental initiatives which may have contributed to the increase in GPs and therefore it is not clear how much the new contract has contributed to this improvement (paragraphs 3.9–3.10). |
Recruitment and retention | Introduce a much more progressive career structure for GPs, involving a three-tier system, reflecting intensity of work, maturity and experience. Introduce a return to work package and review pension arrangements to provide better reward for NHS commitments in the later years of working life. | Good progress has been made on increasing the number of GPs. It is, however, too early to say if the new contract has helped retention. under the new contract investment in the seniority payments scheme increased by 30 per cent and pensions have been reviewed to ensure that contributions are reflected and uprated in future years (the dynamising factor). However, some GPs report that it is becoming more difficult for young GPs to become partners. |
Better staff satisfaction and morale | Increase employment options for GPs, for example job-share, or time working from home. | Some progress has been made but increases in satisfaction of GPs have not been sustainable. GP satisfaction increased up to 2005 and the removal of out-of-hours was important factor in improving GP satisfaction. Employment options for GPs have increased which is reflected in the increase in the number of part-time GPs. However, 2007 surveys show that staff satisfaction of GPs has deteriorated (paragraphs 3.30–3.31). |
Source: Department of Health; and National Audit Office | ||
Notes
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What benefits are still to be achieved?