Hundreds of GP out-of-hours shifts unfilled in Wales

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Media captionDr Sherard Le Maitre, clinical director of the Cardiff and Vale out-of-hours primary care service, said it relied on volunteers

The scale of the "crisis" facing GP out-of-hours services has been revealed by BBC Wales research.

It shows Welsh health boards could not fill hundreds of shifts, equating to thousands of hours of GP-cover during the course of last winter.

One woman with bipolar disorder said the impact had been "enormous" and had caused her to self-harm.

The Welsh Government said it was working with health boards "to improve out-of-hours services further".

Our research, following freedom of information requests, showed many health boards missed - by a significant margin - key targets for meeting calls ranked as urgent in terms of home visits or appointments.

Several health boards failed to provide any GP out-of-hours cover at all in their areas at various points in the six months to March 2018.

In some instances, patients had to wait 24 hours or longer for a home visit or to get an appointment to see a GP at weekends or outside the hours when their usual surgery is open.

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Gwen Goddard from Cwmbran told BBC Radio Wales her bipolar disorder meant she often needed to access services during the night or at weekends.

"I have actually been told to call back in the morning, I have been told to call the Samaritans before now," Ms Goddard said.

"The impact is enormous. If you are in a mental health crisis - if you are having a panic attack or if you are feeling suicidal and can't get hold of somebody or have to wait - it is such an extreme state of mental distress that it further impacts on the state that you are in.

"It has caused me all kinds of problems. I have quite bad, quite horrific scars on my legs from self-harming due to not being able to see a doctor, to get any medication or to get any help when I have been in distress."

There are 24 different primary care centres - mostly attached to hospitals - which provide out-of-hours cover when GP surgeries and clinics are closed. Calls are handled by the health board or NHS 111 service.

How does it look in your health board area?

Abertawe Bro Morgannwg

Aneurin Bevan

Image copyright sturti/Getty Images

Betsi Cadwaladr

Cardiff and Vale

Cwm Taf Health Board

It did not provide details about GP out-of-hours rotas on grounds of cost - but did provide information on performance.

Hywel Dda

Powys

Did not provide details about GP out-of-hours services provided by other organisations, namely Shropshire Doctors and Abertawe Bro Morgannwg.

The research by BBC Wales also reveals how the problems are contributing to significant delays faced by patients with several health boards breaching - by significant margins - targets about the time it takes to see urgent cases calling the out-of-hours service.

The problems, not surprisingly, peaked during the winter months.

The upshot of that meant it was likely more people would have turned up to already-stretched hospital emergency departments.

Groups representing GPs have long warned that out-of-hours services in Wales are in "crisis".

In January, a BMA Wales survey found exhaustion was the main reason GPs did not sign up for out-of-hours shifts.

In May, a report by the community health councils found too much out-of-hours GP care was patchy and the service across Wales was fragile. It recommended new ways of delivering out of hours care.

Dr Anish Kotecha, a GP in Cwmbran, told BBC Radio Wales that many doctors go into general practise to have better working hours and are often reluctant to work nights or weekends.

Out-of-hours GP services

In numbers

  • 600,000 people contact the service each year

  • 66% of staff felt it was not flexible enough to meet peaks and troughs in demand

  • 77% of patients rated the service good or very good

  • 5% of patients rated it poor or very poor

  • 46% of staff disagreed or strongly disagreed that morale was good

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The findings also back up a recent Wales Audit Office report which warned that while out-of-hours services are appreciated by patients, national standards were not being met due to morale and staffing issues.

The chairwoman of the Royal College of GPs in Wales Dr Rebecca Payne said the data was very concerning and added to mounting evidence that out-of-hours services were unsustainable.

It has also launched an action plan outlining five steps to turn the services around, including increasing the number of trained call handlers.

"Welsh Government and local health boards need to take heed of our recommendations and take urgent action to improve the services," she said. "They owe it to the staff working in the services and the patients trying to access them."

A Welsh Government spokesperson said: "We expect health boards to provide care to meet the needs of patients out of hours, and make best use of all multi-disciplinary professionals.

"Whilst a recent Wales Audit Office patient survey revealed that 89% of respondents rated the service as excellent, or very good,' we are working with health boards to improve out of hours services further."

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