GPs now working on average 26 hours a week

GPs now working on average 26 hours a week

A recent study (Rosa Parisi, 2024) has shown the contracted hours fulfilled by each fully qualified GP has fallen from 30 a week on average in 2015, to 26 a week in 2022. This may have a significant effect on CKD patients, and all those with chronic conditions.

This reduction was largely driven by male GPs cutting their hours from 2015, when many worked more than the hours required under a full-time contract.

This fell to almost 32 hours a week on average in 2022, while female doctors remained stable at about two-thirds of a week – between 24 and 25 hours on average.

The latest NHS data also showed that of the 37,677 fully qualified GPs in England, they are filling 27,662 FTE roles.

One full-time equivalent GP could be made up of multiple doctors working part-time, which is increasingly the case. And some qualified GPs may not be working as GPs.

Between 2015 and 2022, the median full-time equivalent (FTE) of a fully qualified GP decreased from 0.80 to 0.69. But, at the same time, there was a 9% increase in registered population per GP FTE. And, importantly, the numbers of patients with chronic conditions increased by 32%.

This means there has been an increase of almost 250 patients per GP, with each family doctor now responsible for 2,085 patients each on average.

Figure 1.

The average number of patients per GP is continuing to rise

The study also found GP surgeries in the most deprived areas had 17 per cent more patients and 19 per cent more chronic conditions per full-time equivalent GP, compared with the least deprived areas.

Conclusion (and how affects CKD patients)

In other words, the decrease in total working hours is caused by a combination of factors: family doctors retiring early, poor recruitment and retention, and more GPs doing fewer hours; partly as they have more patients (with more chronic problems) leading to more pressure when they are there.

For these reasons, CKD patients are likely to get less and less of GPs’ time. Hence CKDEx advises if you have CKD, and are referred to a local hospital renal unit, and see a nephrologist, you should resist being discharged back to your GP.

None of this data factors in the huge amount of admin (and other duties, including teaching and supervision) GPs do, outside their contracted hours. CKDEx feels they are the coalface (and best bit) of the NHS, and still do a great job, in increasingly difficult times. We need more GPs, and support staff, with all being able to do manageable jobs.

Other resource

More information here on our sister website MyHSN

Last Reviewed on 17 September 2024

Scroll to Top