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Chamber and committees

Official Report: search what was said in Parliament

The Official Report is a written record of public meetings of the Parliament and committees.  

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Dates of parliamentary sessions
  1. Session 1: 12 May 1999 to 31 March 2003
  2. Session 2: 7 May 2003 to 2 April 2007
  3. Session 3: 9 May 2007 to 22 March 2011
  4. Session 4: 11 May 2011 to 23 March 2016
  5. Session 5: 12 May 2016 to 4 May 2021
  6. Current session: 13 May 2021 to 4 September 2025
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Displaying 2216 contributions

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Public Audit Committee

“General practice: Progress since the 2018 General Medical Services contract”

Meeting date: 18 June 2025

Graham Simpson

Thank you, convener.

Public Audit Committee

“General practice: Progress since the 2018 General Medical Services contract”

Meeting date: 18 June 2025

Graham Simpson

The data question is quite important for the whole of the NHS, is it not? It would be good to know how many patients GPs are seeing, what the booking system is—that is only part of it—how many people are going through the system and what they are being seen for. In England, I believe that GPs are now required to provide a certain level of information, which they are doing, but we are not doing so here.

Public Audit Committee

“General practice: Progress since the 2018 General Medical Services contract”

Meeting date: 18 June 2025

Graham Simpson

That strikes me as a ludicrous situation. Dr Morrison, you identified that there is a £290 million funding gap. If the Scottish Government was to come up with £290 million, what would that get us?

Public Audit Committee

“General practice: Progress since the 2018 General Medical Services contract”

Meeting date: 18 June 2025

Graham Simpson

Is that it?

Public Audit Committee

“General practice: Progress since the 2018 General Medical Services contract”

Meeting date: 18 June 2025

Graham Simpson

You probably did not see the whole of the previous evidence session. It was all pretty stark, but it ended with a figure from the BMA’s survey of its members, which found that 90 per cent of GPs in Scotland were prepared to take disruptive action because things have got so bad out there for doctors. They are under stress, they are suffering burnout and there are not enough of them. How have we got to a situation in which 90 per cent of Scotland’s GPs are prepared to take disruptive action?

Public Audit Committee

“General practice: Progress since the 2018 General Medical Services contract”

Meeting date: 18 June 2025

Graham Simpson

You might not want a formula, Ms Lamb, but the BMA has come up with a figure, which is £290 million. It has also come up with a figure for the number of GPs who do not have enough work. There are people who are qualified as GPs in Scotland but cannot find enough work—that is an astonishing situation.

Public Audit Committee

“General practice: Progress since the 2018 General Medical Services contract”

Meeting date: 18 June 2025

Graham Simpson

I have not finished. That is 180 whole-time-equivalent GPs. Doctors are sitting there without enough work, and yet we need more doctors.

Public Audit Committee

“General practice: Progress since the 2018 General Medical Services contract”

Meeting date: 18 June 2025

Graham Simpson

Should you not be clear about the reason for that?

Public Audit Committee

“General practice: Progress since the 2018 General Medical Services contract”

Meeting date: 18 June 2025

Graham Simpson

The answer is no, they will not be able to get those results, initially. It is just a hospital app really, is it not?

Public Audit Committee

“General practice: Progress since the 2018 General Medical Services contract”

Meeting date: 18 June 2025

Graham Simpson

Ms Lamb, were you looking at Mr Chapman for some help on that?