Introduction

‘The availability of good medical care tends to vary inversely with the need for it in the population served. This inverse care law operates more completely where medical care is most exposed to market forces, and less so where such exposure is reduced.’ Julian Tudor Hart, 1971.

This briefing seeks to explore the extent to which the inverse care law, as defined by the British GP Julian Tudor Hart, still applies to general practice in England nearly 50 years on from its first description.

Ensuring equal access for equal need is a fundamental principle of the NHS, but need for health care is not equally distributed across the country. People living in socioeconomically deprived areas are at greater risk of having multiple health conditions, and are likely to have multiple conditions at younger ages. Life expectancy and healthy life expectancy (the number of years lived in self-assessed good health) are also lower in areas of high deprivation. In 2017, healthy life expectancy at birth was on average 12 years lower for people living in the most deprived local authority areas in England as compared to the least.

These health inequalities are likely to have been magnified by the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic., Morbidity and mortality from COVID-19 in England have followed a socioeconomic gradient, with highest illness and highest death rates in the most deprived areas. Deprived communities will also bear the brunt of wider impacts of the pandemic – financial hardship, job losses, food poverty, and a widening educational attainment gap – all of which in turn impact on health.

General practice plays a vital role in the NHS. For the majority of the population it is the main source of health care services, providing over 1.2 million appointments in England every weekday. General practice plays a key part in promoting health, preventing disease, and managing chronic illness. It helps to keep people well and out of hospital, and acts as a gatekeeper for access to other parts of the health care system.

The NHS Long term plan explicitly aims to tackle health inequalities, with action to be taken across the NHS including in general practice. One of the requirements of the recently formed primary care networks (PCNs) will be to address health inequalities, in return for additional funding for an expanded workforce of allied health professionals (funding has been pledged for an additional 26,000 by 2024). The NHS Long term plan also recognises the longstanding shortage of GPs, and pledged to boost the GP workforce by an extra 5,000 (by 2024). This promise was taken up and expanded to 6,000 GPs by the Conservative government in 2019.

This briefing does not attempt to evaluate the successes or failures of these recent plans, or the myriad of other policies that have attempted to address the inverse care law in general practice over many years. Instead we use publicly available data to explore the current relationship between population need and supply in general practice, seeking to answer the question: how does general practice compare in areas of higher and lower socioeconomic deprivation in England? Our analysis contributes to an understanding of the extent to which the inverse care law persists in general practice today.

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