ROSM
Well-known member
As has been said on here, it is difficult for most people to say with certainty that they agree or otherwise with the proposals because (just like the Big Society) the Government havbe made a god awful mess of explaining it.
However from my viewpoint and from what my local MP (a tory) has explained to me, I am fervently against a service that allows the GP to 'choose' (based on undefined criteria) where and how the non GP stage of treatment is delivered. In my experience, the only issues I have really had with the NHS have been where the GP has failed in their duties to the point that the emergency element (hospitals, paramedics etc) have had to step in and recover the situation. To give further powers and choice to this group would in my view be an unmitigated disaster.
Where I have seen improvements in the quality of GPs it is in the generation who entered medical school in say the last 15 years. Clearly the people now drawn (or the quality of their training)has improved from those that went immediately before. But as I understand it, it is this generation of GPs who are most against the proposals.
However from my viewpoint and from what my local MP (a tory) has explained to me, I am fervently against a service that allows the GP to 'choose' (based on undefined criteria) where and how the non GP stage of treatment is delivered. In my experience, the only issues I have really had with the NHS have been where the GP has failed in their duties to the point that the emergency element (hospitals, paramedics etc) have had to step in and recover the situation. To give further powers and choice to this group would in my view be an unmitigated disaster.
Where I have seen improvements in the quality of GPs it is in the generation who entered medical school in say the last 15 years. Clearly the people now drawn (or the quality of their training)has improved from those that went immediately before. But as I understand it, it is this generation of GPs who are most against the proposals.