Labour will deliver the speed of care patients want, Wes Streeting says
The shadow health secretary said people often felt there were barriers to accessing care.
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Your support makes all the difference.Labour will deliver the NHS care that patients want, the shadow health secretary has said, though he acknowledged it could take time.
In a speech to the Kingās Fund in central London, Wes Streeting reiterated Labourās pledges on the NHS, saying the party would train 7,500 more doctors and 10,000 more nurses every year, including recruiting more medics from within the UK.
Mr Streeting said he would boost the range of health professionals working alongside GPs to ease pressure on primary care, including more use of pharmacists to give things such as vaccinations, wider use of nurses within practices and, for example, allowing opticians to refer people directly to eye specialists.
He said patients often felt that there is ārationing going on and that the objective of the person on the other end of the phone in the (GP) receptionā, and in other parts of the NHS, was to do what they could to ensure the patient could not be seen.
He said he did not think that was quite right, but that was how it felt to patients.
Mr Streeting pledged to end the 8am scramble for GP appointments, repeating the pledge that patients would be given more choice and ability to book appointments online.
The MP was asked whether, given the length of time it takes to train a doctor, patients would be waiting as long to see a GP at the end of a first Labour government as they are at the moment?
He replied: āIf Tony Blair had stood here in 1996 and said the next Labour government is going to deliver 48-hour access to see a GP ā¦ I think in 1996, given the state of the NHS then, people would have laughed him out of the room and said, āheās not going to achieve that, look at the scale of the challengeā.
āI think that despite all the challenges we see in the NHS today, it is still salvageable and, more than that, there is enormous opportunity in this country with the strengths we have in life sciences, technology, and with the brilliant people that we have working in the NHS today, and theā¦ people who would like to work in the NHS in the future, to deliver the quality and speed of access that patients want.ā
He said the country has to change, adding: āWe have got to stop the obsession with simply pouring more money into hospitals, we have to think about what the primary care system looks like and if we grab that mantle of reform, there is no reason why we canāt turn the situation around, and to see far better outcomes by the end of the first term of a Labour government.
āAnd it would be my hope that if we show that improvement in the first term of a Labour government, people would give us a second term, so that over the course of a 10-year period, we can give people an NHS that theyāre proud of.ā
In his speech, Mr Streeting stressed that Labour backs GPs.
He added: āI know that GPs often feel that when Labour highlights waiting times for a GP appointment or face-to-face care, that weāre having a go at them.
āActually, weāre having a go at the Government for leaving general practice over-stretched and under-doctored.
āAs I found on a visit to an excellent GP partnership in Chesterfield on Monday, the concerns we have about the struggle to meet patient need are ones that are shared by GPs themselves.
āOur plan to cut GP waiting times goes to the heart of the crisis in the NHS ā it is a workforce crisis.
āWe have lost 2,000 GPs since 2015. GPs are busting a gut, but they are overburdened, forced to look after an extra 350 patients each.
āIt is not sustainable.ā
He said Labour would ālaunch the biggest expansion of medical training in history, so patients can be seen on time againā.
Professor Kamila Hawthorne, chairwoman of the Royal College of GPs, said: āGPs and our teams are working tirelessly to deliver safe, timely and appropriate care, and to give patients the choice of appointment they want.
āAround 85% of appointments in general practice are already happening within two weeks of being booked, and almost half are delivered on the day they are booked ā and those taking longer than two weeks after booking may be routine or regular appointments for which the timing is therefore appropriate.ā
She said GPs āshare our patientsā frustration when they struggle to access our care, however, this is not down to GPs and their hard-working teams, but due to decades of under-funding and poor resource planningā.
She added: āWe are delivering more appointments overall compared to before the pandemic, but with 852 fewer full-time fully qualified GPs compared to 2019.
āIt is not too late to turn this dire situation around to revitalise general practice as a clinicianās career of choice, and restore continuity of care for patients.
āThe forthcoming primary care recovery plan and long-awaited NHS workforce plan will be key opportunities to do this.ā