Times of Tunbridge Wells 8th February 2017

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NEWS

Local News

Wednesday February 15 | 2017

Doctor warns about danger of NHS GPs referring patients to their own private practices By Murray Jones murray@timesoftunbridgewells.co.uk SUGGESTIONS that family doctors working within the NHS should be allowed to refer patients to their private practices have been criticised by an NHS GP – who also runs his own private practice in Tunbridge Wells. Dr Coonjobeeharry, 53, known by his patients as ‘Dr Harry’, has been a partner at the NHS-funded Old School Surgery in Cranbrook since 2003. But in October 2013, he established his own private clinic, GP Consulting in Frant Road, Tunbridge Wells. He splits his week, working three days in Cranbrook and two with his private patients. And it is this separation which Dr Harry considers fundamental to ethical practice, and why he is so concerned by recent developments from his fellow practitioners. Plans are being discussed by local medical committees (LMCs) around the country to allow doctors to refer patients to their own private clinics. Recently, an NHS GP surgery in Bournemouth set up a private service where patients can pay up to £145 to skip waiting lists to see a doctor. The service will be operated by the same NHS doctors from 8am until 8pm Monday to Friday and 8am until 12noon Saturdays. It offers same-day, ‘unhurried’ and ‘personal’ care ‘rather than the rushed NHS clinics that the cash-strapped service is encouraging’. Under the terms set out in their contracts, family

DR HARRY GPs are firefighting

can’t offer it privately’. Because otherwise there is a conflict of interest. “How can you trust a GP if they have a stake in you going private?” he asked. As an alternative, he champions his own model of distinct patient lists. “I only see patients who are not my NHS patients. I keep it completely separate so it is not compromising. You have to be open about who you are and what hat you are wearing, your private or your NHS one. “Don’t be on call at the same time because you could start to prioritise your private patients because it is more rewarding to you. That’s morally wrong,” he asserted.

Exodus

doctors are not allowed to offer private services to their own NHS patients as this would create a conflict of interest. They are allowed to do private work, but only for patients registered at another practice. Dr Harry has 1,600 NHS patients on his books and agrees that it ‘frees up the NHS’. He said: “If you want your ear syringed, for example, and you don’t want to wait weeks for it, if you have the money, some people will elect to pay.” But he thinks allowing doctors to refer their own NHS patients to their private practice is ‘crossing the line’. “As of now, the ethos of GPs who also work privately was: ‘If it’s available on the NHS then you

There is growing concern, particularly in affluent areas such as Tunbridge Wells, that more and more experienced doctors will choose to go fully private, leading to a brain drain from the NHS. “The exodus has already begun, and it’s accelerating slowly. Lots of GPs in their 50s are going a lot earlier than they would have done. “A lot of them are just firefighting at the moment, and they are completely demoralised. The workload is just not sustainable and wages have dropped year on year,” he said, citing about a 30 per cent pay cut over the last ten years. These changes have meant the next generation of doctors don’t want to take on a partnership role because they can earn the same money on locum or salaried contracts. They will just offer consulting sessions, rather than being tied to a particular dedicated practice. Dr Harry suggested that since partners take more responsibility in the management of the practice, this could make things ‘a lot worse’ for surgeries. “For every two GPs that retire, you’d need to hire three salaried or locum doctors to do the same amount of work,” he said.

Screen star and former Skinners’ pupil dies By Andrew Tong newsdesk@timesoftunbridgewells.co.uk RENOWNED actor Alec McCowen, who grew up in Tunbridge Wells, has died at the age of 91. Mr McCowen, who was awarded the OBE in 1972 and received a CBE in 1986, had starring roles in Alfred Hitchcock’s Frenzy, as Chief Inspector Oxford, and George Cukor’s Travels with My Aunt, as Henry Pulling – both in 1972. He was born in the town in 1925 and attended The Skinners’ School. He gave a vivid account of his childhood in his autobiography Young Gemini. Mr McCowen’s father Duncan owned a pram shop in Tunbridge Wells and his mother Mary was a soubrette and dancer, while his grandfather was an evangelist preacher. After attending the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, he made his West End debut in 1950, and went on to play the Fool in Peter Brook’s King Lear in 1962.

Films He came to fame in Hadrian the Seventh, which won him the first of many Evening Standard awards. Mr McCowen also brought to stage and screen two notable one-man shows: St Mark’s Gospel, on Thames TV and Rudyard Kipling – A Celebration, which was shown on Channel 4. He appeared in more than 30 films, starting with The Cruel Sea in 1953 and including The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner and The Witches. He played Q opposite Sean Connery in the James Bond film Never Say Never Again in 1983, and worked with Martin Scorcese on The Age of Innocence a decade later. His final film role was in Gangs of New York in 2002.


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