In 2015, the medical journal,
Pulse reported that doctors in some English areas, notably South
Birmingham are paid to limit hospital referrals. The payments include limiting referrals for
cancer patients. The scheme is controversial and some members of the
British Medical Association fear it could affect patient care adversely.
GMC guidelines forbid doctors to receive, "inducement, gift or hospitality" which influences or can be seen as influencing the way patients are treated or referred. There is concern the payments could affect doctor patient trust. A
multispecialty community provider was being developed by
Dudley CCG in 2015. It included all the GP practices in the borough,
Dudley Metropolitan Borough Council, and
Black Country Partnership NHS Foundation Trust.
Our Health Partnership planned to be the single largest provider of primary care services in the UK. It was established from a consortium of four NHS trusts and 38 local GP practices to manage a single, whole population budget for about 300,000 people. It provides community-based physical health for adults and children, some outpatient services,
primary medical services, mental health services, public health, learning disabilities services, urgent care centres and GP out-of-hours care. Adult social care services were to be introduced at a later stage of the 15-year contract. In February 2018 it was reported that there had been a 10.8% increase in the emergency admissions rate in the area between 2014–15 and the 12 months to September 2017. By March 2018 it was clear that most of the GP practices would retain their own individual contracts and would not be “fully integrated” into the new organisation. The Connected Care Partnership vanguard, based in
Sandwell, is an alliance formed by
Modality Partnership,
Sandwell and West Birmingham Hospitals NHS Trust,
Birmingham Community Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust,
Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust, the now-defunct Sandwell and West Birmingham CCG and the Intelligent Commissioning Federation, a network formed by 15 GP practices in
Ladywell, Birmingham. Royal Wolverhampton Hospitals NHS Trust runs eight GP practices out of the 44 in Wolverhampton, with a total registered list of 52,862 patients. ==Hospital provision==