Written answers

Thursday, 13 January 2011

Department of Health and Children

General Practitioner Co-operatives

2:00 pm

Photo of Seán SherlockSeán Sherlock (Cork East, Labour)
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Question 37: To ask the Minister for Health and Children if her attention has been drawn to the fact that jobs and services may be lost as a result of funding cutbacks to Southdoc; if the Health Service Executive, or officials of her Department, will engage with representatives of workers in the service to address their concerns; and if she will make a statement on the matter. [1538/11]

Photo of Seán SherlockSeán Sherlock (Cork East, Labour)
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Question 57: To ask the Minister for Health and Children the cuts that have been made to general practitioner doctor on call co-operatives funding for 2011; if discussions have been held with the individual co-ops to address the funding of their services; and if she will make a statement on the matter. [1537/11]

Photo of Mary HarneyMary Harney (Dublin Mid West, Independent)
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I propose to take Questions Nos. 37 and 57 together.

General Practitioner (GP) out-of-hours co-operatives are an important part of our primary care services. While there is no obligation on GPs to participate in co-operatives, GPs contracted under the General Medical Services Scheme must make suitable arrangements to enable contact to be made with them (or a locum/deputy) for emergencies outside normal practice hours. Co-operatives provide an ideal facility to enable GPs to discharge this obligation.

There were over 983,000 contacts with GP out-of-hours co-operatives in 2009 and the total cost of funding out-of-hours services was in the region of €110 million.

A National Review of GP Out-of-Hours Services was published by the HSE in March 2010. It reviewed the 9 GP co-operatives and the 4 extended-hours services that are currently in place. The Review makes a series of recommendations designed to strengthen and standardise out-of-hours services across the country, including:

Out-of-hours services to be extended to cover parts of the country where there is currently no such provision. Each of the 4 HSE regions will now engage with non-participating GPs with the aim of ensuring full out-of-hours coverage nationally.

The number of call centres to be reduced from 7 to 4.

A working group comprising representatives from the HSE, the Irish Medical Organisation and the Irish Association of General Practitioner Co-operatives has been established to advance the implementation of the recommendations.

As aspects of the Deputy's questions relate to the management and delivery of health and personal social services, which are the responsibility of the HSE, my Department has requested the Parliamentary Affairs Division of the Executive to arrange to address these matters and to have a reply issued directly to the Deputy.

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