MPs attack UK doctors' pay rises for less work

Doctors have raked in "eye-watering" pay rises while doing less work thanks to a new government contract designed to improve patient care, an influential group of MPs said in a report yesterday. The Public Accounts Committee said the reforms sent...

Doctors have raked in "eye-watering" pay rises while doing less work thanks to a new government contract designed to improve patient care, an influential group of MPs said in a report yesterday.

The Public Accounts Committee said the reforms sent budgets soaring, but failed to improve services in deprived areas and did not lead to longer opening hours at surgeries.

"Partners in GP practices are now putting in less time and their productivity has decreased," said Committee Chairman Edward Leigh. "Only their pay is burgeoning, having increased on average by an eye-watering 58 per cent since 2003."

The government negotiated new contracts with family doctors to try to stop GPs leaving the system and to improve access for patients as part of a key Labour pledge to improve the NHS.

However, the changes have cost far more than expected. Over the first three years, the Bill was £1.8 billion higher than originally planned.

Average salaries for GPs rose from £73,000 in 2002-03 to £114,000 in 2005-06, the report said. Hours worked each week dropped by seven hours during the same period.

Morale has also fallen due to critical media coverage and an emphasis on cost-cutting and targets, rather than quality of care, the MPs said, citing the British Medical Association.

However, the new contracts have succeeed in raising the number of doctors in the system and have improved the consistency of care for long-term illnesses, the MPs noted.

The committee recommended that NHS bosses do more to measure doctors' work. They should demand more annual feedback from GPs on how they have been more productive.

The BMA said the report was "based on an out-of-date understanding of the current situation".

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.