ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
ANI Logo
Menu
Space

84 percent docs believe their workload is affecting care quality

London [England], Nov, 28 (ANI): According to a recent poll, patients are at risk because general practitioners are struggling to provide a safe service.

ANI Nov 28, 2016 20:13 IST googleads

84 percent docs believe their workload is affecting care quality
London [England], Nov, 28 (ANI): According to a recent poll, patients are at risk because general practitioners are struggling to provide a safe service. The poll of 5,025 British Medical Association members found that 84 percent believe their workload is affecting care quality. Only one in ten think they can offer a safe service, reports Daily Mail. Doctors claim they are not being given enough funding to meet the needs of the rising and ageing population. Surgeries are also facing a recruitment crisis, with up to a third of GPs planning to retire or quit in the next five years. One in eight posts is now empty with many doctors heading abroad and too few being trained. Waiting times for appointments are at their worst on record and patients are routinely told there are no slots for the next three to four weeks. The 111 helpline was supposed to reduce the burden but that partially backfired when undertrained call handlers sent too many people to A&E instead. Chaand Nagpaul, the chairman of the BMA GPs committee, said: "We cannot continue to have a service that cannot deliver a safe and effective level of care to the public. This major survey of more than 5,000 GPs in England demonstrates that GP practices across the country are struggling to provide safe, high-quality patient care because of unmanageable workload." Adding, "Many practices are being overwhelmed by rising patient demand, contracting budgets and staff shortages which has left them unable to deliver enough appointments and the specialist care many patients need. Addressing the crisis in general practice requires a clear strategy that tackles the numerous problems undermining GP services." "We need an urgent expansion of the workforce in both practices and community-based teams, with GPs calling for an increased number of nurses to look after housebound patients and mental health workers to cope with growing demand in this area," he said. "Better information for patients about how to safely self-care and wider funding increases for general practice are also needed," he concluded. (ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

Parenting

Kindergarten misbehaviour may cost society in the long run: Study

Kindergarten misbehaviour may cost society in the long run: Study

For the first time, a new economic analysis has linked kindergarten pupils' misbehaviour to significant societal costs in terms of criminality, associated medical expenses, and lost productivity as they grow up.

Read More
Others

Facility dogs in children's hospitals benefit patients, staff

Facility dogs in children's hospitals benefit patients, staff

The most profound impacts of HFDs were observed in terminal care and patient cooperation, with 73% of respondents reporting that HFDs were "very often" or "always" beneficial in providing palliative care during the terminal phase.

Read More
Food

Study finds how natto consumption could reduce anxiety

Study finds how natto consumption could reduce anxiety

Researchers at Osaka Metropolitan University found that familiar and affordable foods can help create a society where people are healthier and less stressed. Japanese natto, which is made from softened soybeans that have been boiled or steam-fermented with a bacteria known as Bacillus subtilis var. natto, might be one example of such a food. The study was published in the journal, 'Journal of Applied Microbiology'.

Read More
Fitness

Exercise is vital than nutrition in maintaining weight loss

Exercise is vital than nutrition in maintaining weight loss

Based on a recent study from the University of Colorado Anschutz Health and Wellness Centre (AHWC) at the CU Anschutz Medical Campus, physical activity helps maintain significant weight loss more successfully than a diet.

Read More
Fitness

How exercise more important than diet to maintain weight loss

How exercise more important than diet to maintain weight loss

Physical activity helps maintain significant weight loss more effectively than diet, according to a recent study from the University of Colorado Anschutz Health and Wellness Centre (AHWC) at the CU Anschutz Medical Campus.

Read More
Quirky

Indulge in your Sunday with these leisurely activities

Indulge in your Sunday with these leisurely activities

How does your Sunday look after a week of heavy workload and stress? You might make a lot of plans but end up doing nothing. Or it could be the other way around i.e. you end up having an eventful Sunday even though you had no such plans.

Read More
Relationships

Being married may help people maintain lower blood sugar levels

Being married may help people maintain lower blood sugar levels

People living with a spouse seem to have a higher likelihood of being healthy in terms of maintaining lower blood sugar levels regardless of how harmonious or acrimonious their relationship is, suggests a study published online in the journal BMJ Open Diabetes Research & Care.

Read More
Fitness

Researchers suggest effects of resistance training in older adult

Researchers suggest effects of resistance training in older adult

A protein response that takes place at the cellular level as a result of ageing includes a balance between oxidants and antioxidants, low-grade inflammation, and is the cause of many medical conditions.

Read More
Others

Food insecurity directly linked to healthcare expenses in US

Food insecurity directly linked to healthcare expenses in US

Researchers at the Wake Forest University School of Medicine have reported the findings of a new study that shows food-insecure families spend more money on health care than food-secure families.

Read More
Food

Eating disorders can be detected earlier: Study

Eating disorders can be detected earlier: Study

The study found how people with electrolyte abnormalities were twice as likely to be diagnosed with an eating disorder. Those with severe irregularities were five times more likely to be diagnosed.

Read More