GP Federations became popular among English
general practitioners after 2010 as a means to exploit the opportunities[1]—or mitigate the threats—posed by the
Five Year Forward View proposals in the
English NHS which envisaged delivering primary care at a larger scale than the traditional GP list. It is widely believed that ‘Practices cannot survive on their own – they have to look at ways of making themselves stronger.’ 15 sites were selected in December 2015 to test new enhanced primary care models serving populations of 30,000 to 50,000 patients.[2] Some, but by no means all,
clinical commissioning groups have given financial support to encourage the formation of federations.[3]
As the
British Medical Association explains there are many names and many organisational forms: federations, networks, collaborations, joint ventures, alliances. By 2017 it appeared that GP Federations were the commonest titles for collaborative arrangements which fall short of full merger or partnerships.[4] Both the BMA and the
Royal College of General Practitioners were keen to support such developments, the
RCGP having encouraged them since 2008.[5]
In January 2019
NHS England told
clinical commissioning groups that they must establish
primary care networks, typically covering 30-50,000 people, in their areas by 30 June. £1.50 per head of population per year is to be committed to ‘developing and maintaining’ them. The plan says networks 'will comprise a range of staff such as GPs, pharmacists, district nurses, community geriatricians, dementia workers and AHPs such as physiotherapists and podiatrists/chiropodists, joined by social care and the voluntary sector'. It is expected that the GP contract will be changed to require every practice to join one, and that all local enhanced services will be funded through the networks.[6]
Yorkshire Health Network - covers all 17 practices within NHS Harrogate and Rural District
Defunct Federations
Danum Medical Services Ltd, set up in Doncaster by 23 local shareholding practices went into administration in March 2016 after losing contracts for an extended hours hub and GP out-of-hours services.[59]
Horizon Health Choices Ltd. in Bedfordshire went bankrupt in November 2016.[60] It was forced to employ locum doctors which proved unsustainably expensive.[61]