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Redcar & Cleveland MP Anna Turley welcomes Labour’s plans to bring back the family doctor

 



• Government consults with British Medical Association on measures including

largest boost to GP funding in years and reducing outdated targets to free up

time

 

• Reforms are part of Government’s Plan for Change to get more patients through

the NHS front door and bring back the family doctor

 

GPs in Redcar and Cleveland will be able to spend more time treating patients under

Labour’s proposed reforms to general practice which will bring back the family doctor

and slash red tape.

 

Anna Turley has today welcomed Labour’s plans to bring back the family doctor

and end the 8am scramble for appointments – key manifesto commitments with action

being taken to deliver on those promises and get the NHS back on its feet. Under the

proposals, patients in Redcar and Cleveland, including those with complex needs,

long-term conditions, or the elderly would experience greater continuity of care.

 

The proposals fall under the new GP contract for 2025/26, which is now out for

consultation with the British Medical Association’s General Practice Committee to

provide its feedback.

 

The proposals are backed by the biggest boost to GP funding in years – an extra £889m

on top of the existing budget for general practice.

 

The proposed measures would also reduce the number of outdated performance

targets that GPs must meet, in a further step to reduce bureaucracy and ensure

doctors can spend more time with their patients.

 

Anna Turley, MP for Redcar and Cleveland said:

 

“When I knock on doors in Redcar and Cleveland I hear time and time again the difficulty

that residents have in making a GP appointment and how important the front door to our

NHS is to them and their families.

 

“I promised residents in Redcar and Cleveland that we would help bring back the family

doctor and I’m delighted to see proposals that would deliver on that promise.”

 

Health and Social Care Secretary Wes Streeting said:

 

“General practice is buckling under the burden of bureaucracy, with GPs filling out

forms instead of treating patients. It is clear the system is broken, which is why we are slashing red tape, binning outdated performance targets, and instead freeing doctors up to

do their jobs.

 

“We promised to bring back the family doctor, but we want to be judged by results - not

promises. That’s why we will incentivise GPs to ensure more and more patients see the same doctor at each appointment.

 

“Through our Plan for Change, we are acting to fix the front door to the NHS and we have

already started hiring an extra 1,000 GPs into the NHS.

 

“We are proposing substantial additional investment and greater flexibility to employ doctors so patients get better care. I call on GPs to now work with us to get the NHS back on its feet and end their collective action.”

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