This site is intended for health professionals only


Government not on track to fill 26,000 ARRS roles by 2024, claims RCGP

Government not on track to fill 26,000 ARRS roles by 2024, claims RCGP

The Government risks failing to meet its manifesto pledge to recruit 26,000 Additional Roles Reimbursement Scheme (ARRS) staff without stepping up efforts, according to analysis by the RCGP.

The 2019 pledge promised to provide practices with pharmacists, mental health therapists, physiotherapists, and link workers to help free up GP capacity.

According to NHS Digital figures reviewed by the RCGP, an estimated 9,464 ARRS roles had been filled across PCNs as of September 2021: several thousand short of the 13,000 staff the RCGP said it would expect to be in place two and a half years into the scheme.

Delivered across five years, the RCGP said it would expect around 5,200 roles to be filled each year to meet the 2024 target, which is measured against a baseline established in March 2019.

It comes two months after health secretary Sajid Javid admitted that the Government is not on track to deliver its election manifesto pledge to recruit 6,000 additional FTE GPs by 2025.

RCGP chair Professor Martin Marshall warned that although progress toward meeting the ARRS target is coming along ‘better’ than the GP target, it is ‘still slow and very concerning that this could be another promise that won’t be met’.

He added that efforts need to be ‘stepped up’ to catch up and meet the target, highlighting the need to support practices under ‘intense’ workload and workforce pressures as the NHS enters a third year of the Covid-19 pandemic.

He added that efforts need to be ‘stepped up’ to catch up and meet the target, highlighting the need to support practices under ‘intense’ workload and workforce pressures as the NHS enters a third year of the Covid-19 pandemic.

He said: ‘The impact of not having enough staff in general practice is being felt acutely both by GPs and our team members who are in the profession and working to their limits, and our patients who are facing longer waits for the care they need. Meeting this target – and the GP target – will be vital to addressing this.’

He added that practices ‘simply do not have enough GPs and members of the wider practice team to manage the ever-growing need for care’ in light of ‘burgeoning’ waiting lists to access GP services.

However, the Government suggested the analysis was not accurate.

A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said: ‘We are on target to recruit 26,000 new staff to support GPs’ surgeries, including pharmacists, physiotherapists, dieticians and occupational therapists.

‘The new recruits will be a core part of local primary care teams, reducing pressure on general practice and ensure patients can see or speak to the right clinician.

‘We have invested £530m to expand GP capacity during the pandemic, on top of £1.5bn until 2024 and we have a record number of GPs in training this year, with 4,000 accepting places.’

A version of this article was previously published by Pulse’s sister title Healthcare Leader.


          

READERS' COMMENTS [4]

Please note, only GPs are permitted to add comments to articles

Patrufini Duffy 11 January, 2022 8:11 pm

Access doesn’t equate to effectiveness, significance or efficiency in this somewhat weird addicted healthcare business. Late to realise that, those PhD WizKids, but keep calm and gimmicks to carry on, and pockets filled with silver coin and all. No country in the world, is such an outlier as this.

Dave Haddock 11 January, 2022 10:01 pm

They are almost completely useless, so that should save the nhs from a small proportion of the squandering.

ian owen 12 January, 2022 10:13 am

wow. Seriously? We have both pharmacists and physios and they’ve taken a big load off our back

David Church 12 January, 2022 1:55 pm

with that headline, I just had to see the hilarious comments about backsides, but you haven’t written them yet – I came too early!