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GP commissioning rejig sparks alarm

Posted: 11 November 2004 | Subscribe Online


Plans to devolve commissioning from primary care trusts to GP practices may badly affect mental health services, says a charity.

Research by the Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health raises concerns over the introduction of practice-based commissioning next April.

Under the new system, surgeries will be able to commission most specialist services. But, although national tariffs will be set for most services, mental health provision will be excluded from the payment-by-results scheme because of the difficulty in dividing services and applying distinct prices.
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The charity said there were dangers that practices would choose the cheapest options rather than the most appropriate services.

It was also concerned that there is no IT system available to help doctors make choices about treatment.

Dr Alan Cohen, director of primary care at the Sainsbury Centre, said: "Practice-based commissioning is the logical conclusion of the government's NHS reforms. But it will not work for patients unless we can be sure that all services are of sufficient quality, that choices are supported by good information and that cost considerations do not distort decision making. None of these conditions yet apply to mental health services in England."
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Guidance on the new system, unlike that issued for primary care trusts, does not include a requirement on individual practices to consult service users about services or give notification of plans to change those they buy.

Cohen said: "To avoid destabilising mental health services we need to see clear rules for practices to give plenty of advance warning of changes to what they buy for their patient."


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