NHS England’s Sustainability and Transformation Plans (STP) would see England divided into 44 “footprints” – which must achieve financial balance by next year.
The idea, conceived six months ago, could see Hackney’s healthcare linked with that in seven other local authority areas – the North East London (NEL) STP.
Hackney’s own health boss Cllr Jonathan McShane has written to health secretary Jeremy Hunt complaining he has been kept in the dark about the plans.
This week Well Street GP Nick Mann told the Gazette most of his colleagues still know nothing about the “hastily-conceived” idea he dubbed a “dangerous experiment” that could leave healthcare “in pieces”.
Hackney has not yet signed up to the plans but other local authorities in the region have done.
Dr Mann, who believes STP is the “the final nail in the coffin” for the NHS, said: “Our local STP plans to cut the number of GPs from 600 to 400, backfilled by a 111 phone service directing you to ‘self-care’ websites, a pharmacist, or a non-medically qualified individual.”
But a North-East London Commissioning Support Unit (CSU) spokesman said the figure related only to Newham, Tower Hamlets and Waltham Forest, and that numbers of Hackney GPs would only be worked in if and when Hackney signed up.
Dr Mann added: “We should really increase the number of GPs to 800 within four years, in terms of population increase. Anyone who has used 111 and who sees the clinical feedback sheets knows it’s worse than useless.
Full story in The Hackney Gazette, 22 September 2016