General
Practitioners and out of hours working.
Written
January and February 2014
I started
writing this essay because one of the main items on the news on January 29th
was the huge increase in ambulances transporting patients over the age of 90 to
accident and emergency departments. The government blames this on the change of
the GP contract in 2004 and Andy Burnham, Shadow Health Secretary, attributed
this to lack of social care and lack of support at home. The reasons are
probably more complex.
There is an
excellent history of out of hours care written by Dr Eric Rose in 2013 (1). He
pointed out that from the creation of the NHS in 1948 to 2004 out of hours care
was the personal responsibility of your GP 365 days and nights a year. From
1966 partners in group practices were allowed to take turns for being on call
at night. in 1996 out of hours co-operatives were set up all over the United
Kingdom. A cooperative might have 40 to
100 GPs taking turns to provide evening, night and weekend care. These
co-operatives were managed by the general practitioners. It was mandatory, in
this area, to work for our cooperative. In 2004 Primary Care Trusts took over
the management of out of hours care. GPs were allowed to opt out of working out
of hours if they gave up £6000 of their income. Many GPs, including me, jumped
at the chance of having a normal family experience. From April 2014, each
patient over the age of 75 will have named an accountable GP. GPs will have the
responsibility of monitoring the quality of the out of hours service for their
patients. Jeremy Hunt, the Secretary of State for Health, thinks this will mean
a return to traditional general practice.
What rubbish!!
I would now
like to write about my personal experience and opinions of out of hours care.
Both my parents were general practitioners in Castleford, West Yorkshire, and I
was born in 1945, before the creation of the NHS.
My first
experience of out of hours care in general practice was watching and listening
to my parents. They were in a partnership of 3 so were on call two nights and
two weekends out of three. I never heard them complain once about having to get
up at night. It was simply part of the job and very tiring especially if there
was a complication in a maternity case or very thick fog, which occurred often
in the 1950s and 60s.
My first
personal experience of working at night was my first house officer job at the
London Hospital. This was a six-month appointment as a Receiving Room Officer.
The receiving room was the accident and emergency department as well as
undertaking the initial assessment of a patient who was to be admitted. After a
period working daytime shifts one then undertook seven twelve – hour shifts
working at night. After that there were two or three full days off duty. My diurnal
rhythm got completely confused and I took a sleeping tablet (nitrazepam) to
help me sleep during the day time. (It was in the news in late January 2014
that there was an increased incidence of heart attacks in shift workers. I am
not surprised at this). On duty at night in the London Hospital receiving room
were just one house Officer and a staff nurse. This was nice and cosy but no
joke when the department became busy. One was allowed to call for extra medical
help if there were 20 or more patients in the department. One night 19 firemen
were brought in having being overcome by smoke and heat. The nurse and I dealt
with them by ourselves. Actually, all they needed was rest and plenty of water
to drink. The night receiving room officer was also on call for any
disturbances on a ward. I was only called to a ward on one occasion. This was
to at the orthopaedic ward where a man was wondering about, pulling his drip
stand behind him and generally acting in a crazy manner. He had delirium tremens
which results from withdrawing alcohol from an addict too quickly. I gave him
an injection of a tranquilliser which seemed to sort things out. What amused me
was that my friend Brian Colvin was the orthopaedic house officer and during
his six-month job, never got out of bed once!
I first
became a general practitioner in Cheltenham in 1973. There were 4 partners
looking after about 10,000 patients. We did one night and one weekend in four,
and more frequently if a partner was on holiday. I might not be woken at all or
could have two or three visit requests during the night. It was pretty busy
during the daytime on Saturdays and Sunday mornings. In the week, one had to go
to work the next day even if one was exhausted. The most important observation
I want to get over in this essay is that over 90% of the time I had never met
these patient before. The government and press over recent years have been
arguing that patients want to see their own doctor during the night and at
weekends. If you ask that question in a survey of patients, obviously a
significant number will say yes. Of course, there were some patients who
frequently requested to see us in antisocial hours and these were often
psychiatric cases (a patient once sprayed me all over with her perfume during
one night visit!)
Patients
with minor problems usually called us out before midnight. During the night,
there were more serious illnesses to deal with.
I will never
forget the night I had two visit requests within a couple of minutes of each
other at about 2 AM. The first was to woman having an epileptic fit and the
second to an 11-year-old child with breathing problems. I decided to visit the
woman and call an ambulance to the child. (In those days it was frowned upon
for the GP to call an ambulance without having assessed the patient). I was let
into the woman’s house and what was happening was that she and her husband and
had a huge argument and he decided to call a doctor to her. He had lied about
the fit. I was pretty angry. When I got home, I had a phone call from the local
hospital to inform me that the 11-year-old child had died. I was really upset
and angry and got in my car again and drove to the woman’s house. It was about
5 o’clock in the morning and I was smoking a cigar as I walked up the path
towards the front door. I was going to angrily inform them what had happened.
As I got closer to the front door, I turned round and drove home. My next-door
neighbour was a consultant neurologist, David Stevens. He felt that the child
might have had an epileptic fit and although death from fits is rare, it is not
impossible. This is the only time in the whole of my general practice career
when I had two visit requests in the night at the same time. I had been a GP in Cheltenham for three years
when this event happened. I had never met either of these patients.
During the
night, there was no access to the medical records unless I drove to the
surgery, unlocked it and searched for the notes in the reception area. There
certainly were no computers in primary care at that time. One had to write up
the medical record the next time one was in the surgery. It was easy to forget
to do this and to forget could have serious implications.
It always
amused me that when I answered the phone in the middle of the night by saying
“Dr Sloan speaking. How can I help you?”
a significant number of patients would reply “can I speak to Dr Mules,
please?” or one of the other partners’ name. Did they think all four partners
were up all night in the surgery? I did think of having a cartoon made with all
four of us in bed together and telephone on each of two bedside tables.
Obviously, a
GP should not drink alcohol when on call but I certainly came across a few that
did. Indeed, one Christmas Day, I partook of a couple of sherries in a house
and when I was leaving, shouted happy Christmas, opened what I thought was the
front door, went through shutting it behind me, to find I was in a cupboard!
I worked as
a GP in Cheltenham for about four years and left for personal reasons. My wife,
Kath, and I decided, in 1978, to buy the house and surgery in Airedale,
Castleford from my mother who had retired as a GP in 1976. This was the house I
was brought up in. My mother’s patients had been distributed to other general
practitioners in Airedale, Castleford. Castleford was designated as an “open
area” and that meant there was a lack of GPs. The bureaucracy made it easy to
set up a new practice. On 1 November 1978, we had a fully equipped surgery and
Kath was the practice manager. However, there were no patients. My friends and
contacts spread it around that I was starting and the practice very slowly but
surely built up.
The rest of
the general practitioners in Castleford took part in an out of hours rota. I
was not allowed to use this and worked for two and a half months continuously
without a night or weekend off call. This was a great strain. Because I was
building up the practice, I did not refuse any visit request. Apart from one or
two friends, I did not know any of these patients and it took over two weeks
for a newly registered patient’s records to come through. It makes no
difference whether one is working in practice with 10,000 patients or 200, one
still does not know the great majority of patients one is dealing with at night
and weekends. I advertised for help and two doctors, Ted and Ann McGrath, who
were working in our local hospital at the time, helped me out at weekends. I am
eternally grateful to them as I am to my good friend Dr Grahame Smith with whom
I was at medical school. He worked in a group practice four miles away in
Pontefract. That practice allowed me to join their out of hours rota. Of course,
again, I knew none of their patients. I thought I had won the pools when some
GP colleagues from Pontefract set up a proper mini deputising service and at
long last I got some decent time off.
It took me
quite a while to realise the significance of my contractual obligations to my
patients. From 1948 to about 1996, each GP was personally responsible for his
patients 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. That meant that if locum made a
mistake while one was on holiday, one still was responsible for the patient. If
a trainee doctor made an error, one was responsible.
In 1996 the
government provided money for GPs to set up out of hours co-operatives. This
was very popular indeed. It was mandatory for each of us to work regular shifts
for our co-operative. There were two bases, one in Pontefract and the other in
Wakefield. When the co-operative started, two GPs and a receptionist manned
each base. One of the GPs stayed at the base and saw patients and there and the
other went on visits with a driver.
I much preferred
doing the visits as one could chat and get to know the driver during the break
driving to another visit. On the back seat of the car was a fax machine which
could communicate with the base. Details of visits were printed out by the fax
machine and a decision had to be made as to the degree of urgency (this is
known as triage). One of my colleagues got to know the driver particularly well
(not whilst working!) and they are still happily married to this day! In the
boot of the car there was a well-stocked emergency drugs bag. However, for
legal reasons, one had to bring one’s own morphine and other controlled drugs.
On weekdays,
the evening shift was 6 PM to midnight and the night shift from then until 8
AM. It was a crime for a GP surgery to accept a visit request at 5:50 PM, say,
and phone it through to the out of hours service after 6 PM. It was a similar
crime to tell the patient to ring again after 6 PM. I remember when my mother
was still working and there was just one phone line for the house and surgery.
She was in a rota of GPs for evenings and weekends. She was in the habit, when
it got to about 5:45 PM, of phoning a friend for a long chat that always ended
just after 6 PM! The phone line would be engaged!
It was
always awful undertaking visit requests when the weather was poor. My father
once walked over a mile to a visit request in dense fog and when the door was
opened to him, the husband of the patient said “Doctor, this could have waited
until tomorrow”. Snow and ice are particularly hazardous for anyone driving and
for 10 years I drove a four-wheel drive Fiat Panda. I am sure that on some snowy
and icy days, in our local housing estate, there was only I and hearses on the
roads. One icy night, while I was working for our cooperative, the driver and I
went to the boot to get some medications and the car started sliding downhill.
Fortunately, we were able to stop it but it was sweaty moment.
Working in
the co-operative’s base could be extremely hard work. I can remember one
evening shift in Wakefield when I saw between 50 and 60 patients, had no time
to eat my sandwiches and was drinking tap water from my cupped hands. The base
doctor had to speak to patients on the telephone and decide whether this was a
home visit or to ask them to come to the base. There was a bit of pressure to
ask patients to come to the base and see them oneself rather than making one’s
colleague in the car work too hard. One GP prided himself on hardly ever
putting patients down for home visits. I once went along with my trainee to
show her what went on at the Wakefield base. We walked in and that particular
GP was on the telephone. We heard in say “Madam, I gave you my name at the
beginning of this conversation and I do not intend giving you it again” and
with that he slammed the phone down. I used to undertake teaching the skills of
telephone consultations to the trainees and the above was not a good example. I
had a tape recording of a GP who spent 20 minutes on the telephone trying to
persuade a patient to come to the base. He failed.
Towards the
end of my time working for the cooperative it started to employ nurses and a
car to transport patients to the base. I did hear of one occasion where a
patient was brought to the base when he was so ill he could hardly stand up.
That was certainly bad practice.
A lot of the
GPs working for the cooperative, including me, went straight into their general
practice after a night shift and again this was bad. The pay for undertaking
shifts was pretty good and some GPs undertook a huge amount of work for the
cooperative and I thought this was dangerous for their daytime work.
Our practice
had a problem with one of the three partners roundabout the year 2000 and we
were effectively working as a two-man practice. The practice was allowed to
withdraw from the out of hours work, which was very kind of the management.
In 2004
there was a negotiation between the Labour government and the British Medical
Association that resulted in a new contract where Primary Care Trusts took over
the responsibility of organising the out of hours service. GPs were allowed to
opt out in exchange for loosing income to the amount of £6000 per annum. This
was a very low cost indeed. Certainly a lot of my GP colleagues, including
myself, withdrew from the out of hours commitment to enjoy a relaxing home
life. Some GPs in the Wakefield district continued to work for the out of hours
service but I think locum agencies had to be used to make sure it was fully
manned. Again, I am pretty sure that most of these doctors did not know the
patients they dealt with at night and at weekends.
When I was a
child, GPs expected routine visit requests to be made before 10 AM. For my parents,
home visits were the norm. As well as patients being able to telephone the
surgery, messages could be left at two other houses in Airedale. This informal
request for patients to phone in early has continued to the present day. In my
parent’s day, each GP might do 30 visits after their morning surgery. In the
early 1970s in Cheltenham, I felt hard done by if I had to do eight visits
after morning surgery. There were a lot more visit requests than that made in
Airedale when I started in 1978. The other doctors were persuading patients to
come to the surgeries rather than having a visit and this is certainly more
efficient. However, I was building up my practice and I visited at the drop of
a hat in order to be different. Visit requests in the afternoon and early
evening were regardedas different and more serious but actually many of them
were not.
One afternoon
when I was rather tired, a man phoned up and asked for a visit to his wife. I
took the phone call and felt that visit was not necessary. I said “Don’t you
realise that in the USA and Germany there is no such thing as a home visit?”
The man replied “well, this is bloody England.”
There has
been lots of coverage in the press (2) (3) in recent years of things going wrong in
the out of hours services. Doctors are flown in for the weekend duties from
other parts of Europe. Some have poor language skills and others are not
familiar with how the NHS works. There have been some fatalities because of the
wrong use of drugs. More and more patients have been going to accident and
emergency departments manned by skilled doctors familiar with serious illness
and accidents but not necessarily skilled in dealing with the minor illnesses
that are attending. This has resulted in an increase of admissions,
particularly of children.
It is very
useful to have a primary care out of hours unit on the same site as an accident
and emergency department. In 2011 I visited the new Royal London Hospital which
has the most fantastic accident and emergency department and which also had
access to an air ambulance helicopter on the roof. (I remember when this was
officially opened, one of the consultants stepped backwards and fell off the
roof. Fortunately, the roof has emergency netting in which he landed unhurt).
Next-door to the accident and emergency department is a primary care led
walk-in centre that is open in the evening, at night and weekends. It was about
11 o’clock in the morning when I was there and the primary care unit had two
receptionists working pretty hard. The phone seemed to be continuously being
answered. I had a word with them and realised I had forgotten what it was like
working with London’s East Enders. These phone calls were from patients who had
visited previously and despite being told it was not daytime service in the
week. There were notices to this effect all over the place. They were calling
in to arrange to be seen. Before that unit was established, the Royal London
Hospital accident and emergency department had a general practitioner working
alongside the A and E staff which I am sure prevented a lot of unnecessary
admissions. Our local hospital in Pontefract is also employed a general
practitioner to work in A and E for a
number of years.
What is the
situation now? General practitioners are generally closed in the evening, at
night and at weekends. However all GPs must provide some early morning and
evening appointments. Very few provide appointments on Saturday morning. The
government is looking at providing seven days a week primary care cover which
will not be at all popular.
In 2013, the
Conservative led coalition government introduced a 111 telephone service which
can be used day and night 365 days a year. This was supposed to be for
non-emergencies. However, what is an emergency in the eyes of a patient? The
telephone was answered by a non-clinically trained person who goes through a
list of questions according to a protocol. There are clinically trained staff
on hand to give advice. There were great teething troubles when it started and
GPs were convinced that more ambulances were being called. I had a medical
problem two or three days after the 111 service was introduced and phoned them
on a Saturday morning. I was asked a list of questions which was okay with me
and then told me I would be telephoned back. I had read in the newspaper that day that it
was taking hours and hours for the 111 people to return calls. When I had heard
nothing after an hour, I went to our local pharmacist to see if there was any
information about out of hours services and they had none. I looked on the NHS
webpages and these had not been updated to take into account the new service. I
found out that there was a walk-in centre in Wakefield which is about 10 miles
away from where I live. My wife took me there, and I was most impressed with
the attention I received from an advanced nurse practitioner. The 111 service
did phone back while I was in Wakefield but I felt I was far too late. I had to
use that service again this winter and again saw a nurse practitioner who gave
me an appropriate prescription.
The 111
service is theoretically good and can direct you to an appointment with your
own GP surgery, to a nurse, to a dentist, to our walk-in centre, to a minor
injuries unit or a primary care doctor attached to an A and E Department. There
may be other services available. The 999 service is available as usual for
emergencies and can be used by the 111 people. Some GPs feel that the 111
service recommends the 999 service to frequently.
As a
patient, I have had very few experiences, thank goodness, of using any out of
hours emergency services of the NHS. I was once in terrible pain from an
abscess in an embarrassing place. I was working as a GP in Cheltenham a time
and did not want to go to our own casualty department as I would be known. I was
also praying that I would see a male doctor. I went to Gloucester casualty
department and was examined by young woman doctor who knew of me because I was
her mother’s GP! This abscess recurred when I was working in Castleford and was
incised as I lay on the couch in our sitting room by a locum (John
Papworth-Smith).
I had an
urgent home visit from my GP and good friend Grahame Smith after I returned
from a holiday in India and had contracted dysentery. I had an amazing home
visit from Graham’s partner, John Waring, one Saturday morning in 1979. I was
cracking up because I could not get any help at the weekends when I first
started in the Castleford pratice. John insisted I had a break from work and
actually took over and did the rest of my weekend duty himself. What a fantastic
thing to do for a colleague.
A thread
that runs through the whole of this essay is that it is extremely rare for an
out of hours general practitioner to know the patient or she is dealing with. I
did get to know my patient is pretty well when I was working as a two-man
practice doing my own out of hours work and often knew the patient who called
during the night or weekends. This was a very small part of my working life.
I started
this essay by mentioning a news story about the increase in the very elderly
being taken by ambulance to accident and emergency departments and that the
change in the GPs contract in 2004 was to blame. As time goes on there will be
an increase in the elderly with multiple diseases and on several medications
most of which have side-effects. I therefore think there will be an increase in
the number of the elderly sent to hospitals both by general practitioners and
the 111 and 999 services. I am pretty sure that the change in the GPs contract
in April 2014 will only have a minor impact. Our walk-in centre in Wakefield is
open from 8 AM to 8 PM every day of the year and serves approximately 350,000
patients. I think there should be more walk-in centres manned by GPs and nurse
practitioners but not open at all during the daytime on weekdays. They should
be open during evenings, night and weekends and therefore existing general
practice surgeries could be used. Our walk-in centre in Wakefield operates in
an existing general practice surgery which has enough space for it to operate during
the daytime.
References: Click on the bracketed numbers which are internet links.
References: Click on the bracketed numbers which are internet links.