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The gap between overall life expectancy and healthy life expectancy forecasts across all UK countries suggests that care for older people will be the biggest challenge facing health and care systems over the coming years.
The real key to providing care to and for older people, i.e., those over 65, seems to lie in providing effective and sustainable primary care services rather than just more acute care services. In the UK, primary care (general medical, dental, optometry, and pharmacy services) accounts for around 90% of all patient contact. Its whole purpose can reasonably be seen as essentially keeping people living healthily and independently at home for as long as possible, and if they need more acute care, to get them back home again as quickly as safety allows. While there are considerable roles for community pharmacy, optometry and dental services within this primary care landscape, the role of general medical services, delivered via GP Practices, is, in my view, key to caring for older people and supporting them, their families, and their communities to care for themselves where they are able. This is because: 1. Almost everyone in the UK is registered with a GP Practice, 2. They still tend to reflect natural communities, 3. They intrinsically understand the health and care needs of their population, 4. They supply continuity for people, families, and communities, and 5. Reducing acute care demand through increased primary care provision generates a good return on investment (31%: NHS Confederation, 2023). In an integrated health and care system, which now exists across all countries in the UK, services not provided by primary care in a community setting will inevitably need to be provided in more acute, hospital-based settings. Given the higher relative cost of services provided in acute care and the need to ensure that avoidable referrals, admissions, and length of stay, with their attendant impact on patient safety and wider system flow, are minimised, it would seem obvious to have primary care at the front and centre of service planning and delivery. In truth, though, this rarely seems to be the case. The number of full-time equivalents and fully trained general practitioners is falling, while the number of full-time equivalents and fully trained hospital consultants is rising, and, of course, the proportion of NHS spend on primary care is also falling when compared to acute care.In an integrated health and care system, which now exists across all countries in the UK, services not provided by primary care in a community setting will inevitably need to be provided in more acute, hospital-based settings
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