Book Description | What has gone wrong with the NHS, and in particular with general practice? Why can't we get an appointment to see our GP? And who is our GP, anyway? The UK National Health Service is always in crisis, yet it has been shown, time and time again, that the public value it more highly than anything else in British society. Now things seem worse than ever. Why? And in particular, what has gone wrong with general practice?
It may come as a surprise that general practice has in many ways become a victim of its own success. Put simply, the scope of its work has outgrown the resources available for delivering those services. Patients are fed up, and staff are worn out, demoralised and leaving the service. Practice Matters explains how this situation came about?
Between 1974 and 2006 UK general practice underwent an astonishing evolution, moving from the baggage train of the NHS to become its vital, influential spearhead. The book explains how and why these changes came about. It is the first such account written by a GP whose career spanned that time, and who writes in detail of his own experience of those dramatic advances.
Laced with anecdotes that range from the farcically funny to profoundly sad, the book is part personal memoir, part an outline of the service's history, and part a description of change: of political intrigue, innovations in buildings, staff and technology, and of the pioneering, individual initiatives that led to the development of modern general practice.
The various parts of the book combine to offer a broad picture of just how general practice has become so important and influential within the NHS. But it also goes on, to draw conclusions and offer ideas about how the service could be developed to make the best use of the resources available to it.
Anyone wanting the NHS to prosper needs to know more about it in order to argue for its preservation and development. Practice Matters will help that process. And those outside the NHS, whether in the UK or abroad, that take an interest in the past, present and future of the NHS will also find this unique book of interest. |
Editorial Review | What people have already said about Practice Matters: the Early Years of Modern General Practice. "I have known Andrew Willis for some 25 years, during which I have learnt much from him and engaged in discussion and indeed debate about health care, and in particular the subject of his book - UK general medical practice. I can think of nobody better qualified to write about the past, present and future of what has been described as the soul of a proper, community orientated, health-preserving care system."
Professor David Colin-Thomé, retired GP and formerly National Clinical Director for Primary Care
"Practice Matters is about journeys, fabulous journeys; the journeys of a man, family man and family doctor, but also the journey of a general practice, general practice as a whole, and society. Most of all, it is an invigorating journey for the reader through the memoirs of a much-loved GP fused with unique, insightful understanding of general practice, and seismic shifts in the NHS over recent decades."
Professor Simon Gregory, GP and Regional Director and Dean of Education and Quality, Midlands and East, Health Education England. |