General Practitioners: Standards

(asked on 2nd January 2026) - View Source

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, what assessment he has made of the potential impact of access targets for general practice on continuity of care.


Answered by
Stephen Kinnock Portrait
Stephen Kinnock
Minister of State (Department of Health and Social Care)
This question was answered on 2nd February 2026

The Government values continuity in general practice (GP), but this isn't inconsistent with efforts to improve access, such as via the 24-hour access target where urgent treatment is required.

In the 2025/26 contract, one of the domains of the Capacity and Access Improvement Payment, worth £29.2 million, incentivises primary care networks to risk stratify their patients to support continuity of care, including patients with long-term or complex conditions. This allows GPs to deliver care to meet the specific needs of their patients


Over the past 16 months, the Government has invested an extra £1.1 billion into primary care, allowing for the recruitment of over 2,000 more GPs, and has halved the number of targets GPs are held to so that GPs can spend more time caring for patients. As a result, patient satisfaction with GPs has improved after a decade of decline, rising from 61% in July 2024 to 74% in July 2025, marking a 13-percentage-point increase over the last year.

Over ten million more GP appointments have been delivered in the 12 months to September 2025, compared to the same period last year, building capacity for continuity of care and improving access so that patients can be seen when they need to be in primary care.

We have always valued input from a range of stakeholders on the future of GPs and continue to engage with GPs broadly to ensure the targets are achievable, reflect the needs of the populations they serve, and understand any barriers to delivery of this target.

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