Patient saw eight GPs before cancer spottedon November 30, 2023 at 12:34 am

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

Safety watchdog highlights case as it warns a lack of continuity of care in England puts people at risk.

Stock photo showing a doctor using a computer at desk with hand on mouse and keyboardImage source, Getty Images

Patients are at risk of having serious health conditions missed because of the lack of continuity of care provided by GPs, the NHS safety watchdog says.

Investigators highlighted the case of a man who was seen by eight different GPs before his cancer was spotted as an example of what can go wrong.

Providing continuity of care should be in the GP contract, the Health Services Safety Investigations Body said.

But the government said GPs should already be prioritising this.

As part of its investigation, the watchdog spoke to patients and GPs, as well as analysing data and publishing an in-depth review of the care one particular patient received.

‘Stark example’

The 67-year-old patient, known as Brian, who had learning disabilities, schizophrenia and dementia, had received treatment for breast cancer, but had been discharged from the service.

Two years later he started developing pain in his back.

Over the following eight months, he saw two out-of-hours GPs and six GPs based at his local practices as well as a physio and GP nurse, before he was sent for a hospital check-up in late 2020.

A secondary cancer had developed on Brian’s spine, but it was too late to offer him curative treatment and he was given end-of-life care. He has since died.

The watchdog said the lack of continuity of care resulted in the diagnosis of Brian’s cancer being missed.

One of the key problems was that the different GPs he saw missed the fact he was attending repeatedly for the same issue.

He was also going to appointments for other health problems, so his records contained a lot of information.

Senior investigator Neil Alexander said Brian’s case was a “stark example” of what can happen when there is a breakdown in continuity of care.

“He told our team ‘when I am gone, no-one else should have to go through what I did’.”

Increasingly difficult

The report was critical of the fact there is no specific requirement within the GP contract to ensure practices provide continuity of care – and urged the government to address this.

It said that did not necessarily mean always seeing the same GP, but sharing information in an efficient way.

It said many IT systems used by GPs did not allow doctors to access clinical histories and information quickly and easily.

GPs interviewed said staffing difficulties and pressures on services meant continuity of care slipped down the priority list.

Stock photo showing a doctor and patient in consultation inside doctor's surgery

Image source, Getty Images

Mr Alexander said it was clear some practices were doing better than others.

But he added: “We could see that all want to deliver the best care they can, but the extreme pressure of workloads and having to prioritise other essential requirements makes it very difficult.”

A spokesman for the Department of Health and Social Care said continuity of care was “important”, which was why all patients must be given a named GP to take charge of their care.

He said all practices must try to comply with “reasonable requests” to see a particular GP too.

The Royal College of GPs said changing the contract would not solve the problem on its own.

“Delivering continuity of care is becoming increasingly difficult as GPs and our teams struggle with intense workforce pressures and patient need growing in both volume and complexity,” said the college’s vice-chair Dr Victoria Tzortziou-Brown.

Related Topics

- Advertisement -

Discover

Sponsor

Latest

Tesla profits soar as customers pay moreon April 20, 2022 at 9:29 pm

Elon Musk's Tesla has raised prices for its electric cars as it faces higher costs.Image source, Getty ImagesTesla has been raising prices - but...

Heatwave: More evacuations as Mediterranean wildfires spreadon July 18, 2022 at 3:20 am

Wildfires force France to evacuate some 16,000 people, as Spain, Croatia and Greece are also hit.Image source, EPAFrance has evacuated more than 14,000 people...

Clapham chemical attack: Police raid addresses in North Tynesideon February 8, 2024 at 10:45 am

The week-long police hunt for Abdul Shokoor Ezedi came after a mother and her two girls were hurt.Image source, Met PolicePolice looking for the...

Belvedere deaths: Nadja De Jager and her sons found at houseon March 10, 2023 at 3:18 pm

Nadja De Jager and her sons Alexander, nine, and Maximus, seven, were found on Thursday morning.Image source, Met Police handoutA woman and her two...

GB’s Kerr and Caudery win world golds in Glasgowon March 2, 2024 at 10:33 pm

Great Britain's Josh Kerr and Molly Caudery win stunning golds in front of an electric home crowd at the World Athletics Indoor Championships in...