Appendix 2: Characteristics of survey respondents

The majority of GPs completing the survey were partners and made up almost two-thirds of GP respondents (64%), with just over 20% being salaried GPs and 15% trainee GPs (Table A.1). Recent research by The King’s Fund suggests that about 30% of GPs are salaried, which indicates that salaried GPs are under-represented in the GP survey. This may be because partners play a bigger role in leading QI activities within practices. Most of the GPs who completed the survey were trained in the UK, with less than 1% trained elsewhere.

Table A.1: GP type and practice managers, by country (number)

GP partner

Salaried GP

Trainee GP

All GPs

Practice managers

England

1157

452

315

1924

1109

Northern Ireland

53

4

3

60

58

Scotland

216

40

26

282

202

Wales

85

13

13

111

55

Total

1511

509

357

2377

1424

A slightly different picture emerges if we compare partners and salaried GPs with countrywide data. In England, according to NHS Digital, 58% of GPs are partners, while 27% are salaried GPs (23% among our respondents). In Scotland, only 17% of GPs are recorded as salaried (14% in our survey). In Wales the number of salaried GPs is slightly higher at 20% (12% in our survey) and in Northern Ireland 8% of GPs are salaried (7% in our survey). This indicates that our data are broadly representative of GP type, apart from Wales, where our data under-represent salaried GPs.

Table A.2 shows the percentages of GPs and practice managers who responded to the survey from each country of the UK are very similar to the percentages of GPs registered with the BMA across the four countries of the UK, whether at the level of the individual GP (left side) or the practice (for both the GP and practice manager survey) (right side). There is a slight over-representation in the survey of GPs and practices from Scotland, and a slight under-representation of those from England and Northern Ireland.

Table A.2: GPs and practice managers compared to national data at individual and practice levels, by country (%)

Distribution of respondents across the UK

Individual GPs

Practice level: GPs and practice managers

GPs registered with BMA

GPs in GP survey

BMA practices

Practices in GP surveyi

Practices in practice manager survey

England

83

81

81

80

78

Northern Ireland

3

2

4

3

4

Scotland

10

12

10

12

14

Wales

5

5

5

5

4

i In the GP survey, because some practices had more than one GP respond to the survey, data shown at the level of the practice have been weighted so that the survey distribution of practices according to their list size is consistent with the actual distribution of practice-list size within the UK.

Table A.3 shows that the survey over-represents female GPs and under-represents male GPs (compared with the General Medical Council register of GPs). If we look at respondent type by gender, among GPs who are partners, there was a 50–50 split between men and women. For salaried GPs, 74% were women and 26% were men. The proportion of men and women who were trainees is also similar (13% and 12% respectively). For practice managers, nearly four in five were female (79%) and one in five were male (21%).

Table A.3: GP respondents compared to national data, by genderi (%)

Gender

GMC register of GPs

GP survey

Female

52

56

Male

48

44

i Missing responses were excluded from percentage calculations in all tables.

Just under half of GP respondents were aged 50 years or over (44%). Practice managers were generally older than GPs with nearly two-thirds (63%) aged 50 years or over. Very few practice managers were aged below 30 (1%). Looking at GP type, partners tended to be in the older age groups and trainees tended to be aged under 40 (Table A.4).

Table A.4: Respondent type by age (%)

Age in years

GP partner

Salaried GP

Trainee GP

All GPs

NHS Digitalii

Practice managers

Under 30

0

4

22

4

1

1

30–39

12

41

58

24

29

8

40–49

30

29

18

28

32

28

50–59

50

21

2

38

30

50

60+

8

5

0

6

8

13

ii NHS Digital data is for England only

These results suggest that newly trained GPs are not necessarily heading straight into partnerships. Now that the option of a salaried position is available (introduced in 1996), it is one that many newly qualified GPs may prefer. In 2008, the National Audit Office reported that a fifth of GPs were working as salaried GPs, rather than as partners or locums and in 2018, that had increased to 30%. (Salaried GPs will also include a number of ex-partners who have retired or stepped away from the pressures of partnership and returned as a salaried GP.)

There was a spread of respondents between inner city, urban and rural practices (Table A.5).

Table A.5: Respondent type by area (%)

Practice area

GP partners

Salaried GPs

Trainee GPs

All GPs

Practice managers

Inner city

16

25

30

20

19

Other urban

36

34

25

34

28

Urban-rural mix

33

25

28

30

30

Rural

14

15

16

15

21

Isolated rural

1

1

1

1

2

Across the UK, the vast majority (91%) of GP respondents came from practices that they identified as a ‘free-standing, separate entity’, the traditional small business model of general practice. Within England, of those who were part of a ‘free-standing’ practice, 45% of GPs and 60% of practice managers stated that they were also part of a federation with other practices. This is in advance of the requirement in the NHS long term plan that all practices should be part of a PCN. 47% of GPs and 31% of practice managers identified their practices as having no formal links to other practices. Only a small number of practices in England were either part of a super-partnership within one region (4%) or part of a national multi-practice organisation (2%).

Table A.6 shows the distribution of practices in the GP survey by list size. Since the number of responses from GPs in practices with a list size below 2,000 patients was small (n=25), results shown for these practices need to be treated with caution.

Table A.6: Distribution of practices in GP survey, by practice-list size (%)

List size

Practices in GP surveyi

Under 2000

4

2000–4999

29

5000–9999

41

10000–19999

24

20000 or more

2

i GP survey data at practice level has been weighted for practice-list size within each country.

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