Pictured above: Roy Botterill
Healthcare specialists from Midlands' law firm Harvey Ingram are
ready to advise pioneering GPs keen to press ahead with
commissioning care for patients.
The new initiative to empower clusters of practices and enable
them to make and oversee regional healthcare commissioning was
announced by the government earlier this year.
The first wave of new style practices are now set to join the
so-called Pathfinder Programme, which will identify and support
groups of GPs anxious to press ahead and make faster progress in
taking on the new roles set out in the government's NHS White
Paper.
Specialist healthcare lawyer and Harvey Ingram partner Roy
Botterill says: "The Pathfinder Programme will enable GPs to test
different styles of commissioning consortia, identify key issues,
share knowledge and learning early on.
"Their experience will be invaluable helping shape the way GP
consortia will work and pave the way for a host of critical
business models for others to follow. Progress will also help give
the wider commissioning community confidence to support other
Pathfinder consortia in developing and taking on the new roles in
commissioning local services."
To help kick-start the programme the Department of Health has
made £1 million available from a central funding pot to
support regional learning programmes across England. If all goes to
plan, the first group of Pathfinder consortia is named this month.
From then other emerging consortia will then be able to join the
programme on a rolling basis."
But Botterill warns that there are a host of key issues
practices need to consider well before the formal creation of
commissioning consortia.
He adds: "The new found freedom, access and control offers huge
opportunities, but GPs also face the spectre of navigating their
way through a complex and murky regulatory landscape.
"From the outset GPs look set to be responsible, tightly
regulated and publicly accountable for everything from
organisational reforms, commissioning, contracting, procurement,
clinical, corporate and information governance, HR matters,
property and a host of miscellaneous environmental issues. The full
extent to which GP consortia will be bound by regulatory duties is
still unclear but getting a team of advisors on hand is clearly
vital."
Not all of these duties will automatically apply to every GP
consortia - this will depend on the ultimate structure of GP
cluster. But the government is very likely to opt to impose many
duties via legislation or policy, which will need to be carefully
navigated.
For more information about Harvey Ingram, please visit their
website here: www.harveyingram.com