Contribution of General
Practitioners
Primary Care services are the major
provider of Mental Health Services. This was acknowledged in the
National Strategic Framework for Mental Health 1999 by the
statement that 90% of mental health care contacts occur in a
primary care setting. Since then there has been an increased focus
on primary care delivery of patient care. This provision for mental
health is poorly understood with little research or mapping of
service provision.
Multi professional teams of general
practitioners, practice nurses, and administrative staff provide
primary care services with close working relationships with health
visitors and district nurses. The majority of practices also have
an attached counsellor (often employed directly by practice).
Nurses increasingly provide first point of contact including NHS
Direct and out of hour’s services.
The NHS plan provided new ways of
working with additional 1000 graduate workers and 500 gateway
workers. These are increasingly being configured into multi
professional teams that are developing innovative ways of liaison
with primary health care teams.
The scope of this paper is general
practitioner centric, however there needs to be recognition of the
valuable contribution made by other colleagues in primary care
setting. The understanding of multi-professional working in primary
care needs to be improved with research and service mapping so as
to meet patient needs and improve seamless care with specialist
services.