BRAINTREE residents have said the "what do you expect", after a top doctor revealed the East of England is one of the worst regions when it comes to GP numbers.
Dr Katie Bramall-Stainer, who is the chair of the BMA's England GP Committee, has voiced concern over the low number of doctors working in the east.
According to the health expert, the region boasts just 4,895 GPs, compromising 2,142 GP partners, 1,555 salaried GPs, 55 GP retainers, 153 locums, and 1032 GPs in training.
This means the East of England, which has a population of about 6,348,098 has 7.7 GPs per 10,000 people, which is lower than the 7.8 average for England.
“The East of England has some of the most deprived people and the lowest GP numbers," she added.
“It is a critical patient safety issue”.
Braintree and Witham residents have now reacted to the findings, with Simon Lewis saying "cuts in NHS funding. What do you expect? Ask our MP. Time to get rid." referring to MP for Braintree James Cleverly.
While Nicola Keyes said she "cannot fault" the Witham Health Centre who squeezed in her daughter at short notice, and added: "Always had a first class service."
"You can phone early in the morning to get a same day appointment and after lunch for an afternoon. I had to go this week and had an appointment 90 minutes after I phoned."
Gary Shelley said it was no good "chucking up the houses" without the infrastructure to cope.
While Victoria Louise Whittle revealed her elderly mother had to go to a private GP in Colchester, where they were not seen, meaning her mother had to go to A&E anyway for "abdominal pain".
Dr Bramall-Stainer has now said that although many residents would be feeling frustrated about the waiting times, they must understand there are a “limited number of GPs and a limited number of hours”.
She added: “At the minute we are training more GPs than ever before.
"But with newly qualified GPs, only half take up NHS roles – we have got to make sure we retain staff."
Dr Bramall-Stainer also explained how some people on waiting lists often go straight to a private consultant instead which is “costly”.
Survival rates for those in the East of England is also a concern, with Dr Bramall-Stainer saying “we cannot stay silent and watch this scandal”.
The BMA GP Committee and the government are now set to meet on February, 1 for crunch talks ahead of potential GP strikes.
“If we don’t mange to negotiate a safe contract for 2024/25, this will be the third year in the row," added Dr Bramall-Stainer.
“We can’t go on the way we are. I think we might have to start asking questions that haven’t been asked in a generation.
“We want to protect the communities across the regions."
In response to this article William Guy the Director of Primary Care for NHS Mid and South Essex (MSE) Integrated Care Board (ICB) said: “We recognise the vital role that GP practice teams play and have been working hard to improve access to local services and support recruitment and retention in Essex.
"While we continue to work to ensure services can meet local demand, we can confirm that the general practice workforce across mid and south Essex has risen significantly since data collection started."
"As of December 2023, there are over 4000 staff employed in primary care, equivalent to 3,156 full time equivalent (FTE) staff*”
For more information about the NHS MSE general practice workforce visit here.
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