The Patient Charter

Introducing The Patient Charter

From 1 October 2025, Mosborough Health Centre is following a new Practice Charter, written by the British Medical Association..

The Charter aims to be clear, open, and honest about our services – both what we would like to offer every patient and what funding, demand, and other considerations allow.

It also explains how changes in the GP contract and government policies may affect patients and practices.

Remember, GP practices are on your side. We are here to coordinate your care and support you and your family to stay healthy.

Our Aims

Ideally, we would like to offer every patient:

  • Safety – quick access to a GP or nurse you know, with enough staff for all patients.
  • Stability – a GP who knows your history and makes appointments easier to get.
  • Hope – care that helps keep you well, with longer appointments and joined-up support.

Our Challenges

The number of patients registered with GP practices has increased by 17% since 2015.

There are around 2,000 fewer GP practices now than 15 years ago, and more doctors are leaving the NHS than joining it.

All our staff work hard, but increasing workloads and other pressures can affect wellbeing.

While it’s true there there are qualified, unemployed GPs, funding is not always available to recruit them. Practices receive, on average, 31p per patient per day for unlimited consultations with doctors and nurses.

Our Commitment

We aim to respond to all appointment and advice requests as quickly as possible, giving priority to those who need help most. Urgent requests cannot always be taken online.

To balance timely access with continuity of care, you may sometimes be offered an appointment on another day or with another suitable service.

We know it is important to see a doctor or nurse who knows you. We will do our best to match your preferences for which member of the practice team you see, but this may not always be possible due to workload and staff availability.

What You Can Do

The NHS belongs to all of us, and its services are here for everyone. We always want people to ask for help when they need it.

It’s also important to understand the context we work in. Knowing this helps patients see the challenges practices face. With that in mind, here are some things patients can do that really help:

  • Use the NHS App – to reorder repeat prescriptions. It’s quicker for you and helps us process requests faster.
  • Manage appointments digitally – track hospital referrals or outpatients appointments via the NHS App. This saves time and can get you answers sooner.
  • Try Pharmacy First – for minor conditions such as UTIs, shingles, earaches, sore throats, and more, pharmacists can provide advice and treatment quickly.
  • Self-refer to services – access talking therapies, health and wellbeing support, stop smoking, or alcohol services. 
  • Consider urgency – only request urgent care for something that needs attention today, including new problems or sudden worsening of existing conditions.
  • Use online requests when possible – this helps free up phone lines for urgent needs.
  • Treat staff with respect – everyone benefits when interactions are polite and considerate.

Information:

Our Practice Charter In Full

Dear Patient,

GPs and their practice teams provide the vast majority of NHS care outside of hospitals, supporting you and your family throughout your lives. In a perfect world, we want to be able to offer every patient:

  • Safety – prompt access to a GP or practice nurse you trust, with well-staffed surgeries and enough resource so that no patient feels left behind.
  • Stability – a family doctor who knows you, your medical history, and your community – without the stress and difficulty of finding it difficult to get an appointment.
  • Hope for the future – care that focuses on keeping you well, not just treating illness. We want more time for meaningful consultations, joined-up support closer to your home, from modern GP surgery premises with safe and effective technology to make this possible.

The government talks of “bringing back the family doctor” but what politicians promise is often not planned properly or funded fairly to be able to be delivered in reality.

We aim to respond to all appointment and advice requests promptly, prioritising those most in need. Sometimes we may need to offer you an appointment on another day or direct you to another suitable service.

For safety reasons, urgent medical requests cannot be accepted via our online system. For something urgent, pick up the phone or walk in to our reception.

The need to prioritise urgent cases to keep patients safe can result in longer waiting times for routine/non-urgent appointments.

The new requirement to allow patients unlimited online access for non-urgent medical requests, throughout core hours, makes it more likely that we will have no choice but to create hospital-style waiting lists to meet patient need.

We want to guide you through the NHS, co-ordinate your care, and support you to stay healthy. We want every patient to feel safe and confident in their GP practice – now and in the future.

GPs are on your side.

The Challenges Your Practice Faces

Rising demand, fewer GPs – GPs care for 17% more patients than in 2015, but with fewer GPs. Funding has not kept pace, so many patients find it hard to see their GP quickly, leading to the stressful scramble to secure an appointment.

Practice closures – Around 2,000 practices have been lost since 2010, that’s one in four surgeries, leaving fewer local practices and longer waits or travel for patients.

Funding pressures – Practices receive just 31p per patient per day to provide unlimited consultations with our doctors and nurses, making it hard to employ enough staff and sustain services.

Workforce challenges – More GPs are leaving the NHS than joining. While our staff work tirelessly, system pressures and patient frustration can affect everyone’s morale and wellbeing. We have unemployed GPs now – and practices lack funds to hire them.

Unsafe workloads – Many GPs see far more than the accepted safe limit of patients per day, often working over 60 hours a week. Recent government changes risk making this worse.

Ageing buildings – One in five GP surgeries is now over 75 years old – older than the NHS itself which started in 1948. There is very little investment to provide modern facilities fit for today’s needs.

Access versus continuity – Government policy means speed of an appointment comes before choice. This lack of continuity of care, means patients often don’t get to see a familiar face who knows them well.

Demand management – We always aim to respond to all appointment and advice requests promptly, prioritising those most in need. Sometimes we may need to offer you an appointment on another day or direct you to another suitable service.

The need to prioritise urgent cases to keep patients safe can result in longer waiting times for routine/non-urgent appointments.

The new requirement to allow patients unlimited online access for non-urgent requests, throughout core hours, makes it more likely that we may have no choice but to create hospital style waiting lists to meet demand.

We may unfortunately sometimes face challenges beyond our control:

  • difficulties with accessing services at the local hospitals and long waiting lists
  • workforce challenges – not enough GPs to look after you
  • the need to provide our teams with compulsory NHS training and education
  • unforeseen events
  • NHS IT challenges with old and slow equipment
  • lack of investment in practice buildings and development
  • public health emergencies

We believe patients deserve more

  • Our core contract hours are Monday – Friday, 8am– 630pm.
  • Our consulting times are between these hours.
  • Please note at certain times, e.g. lunch or the ends of the day, a clinician may not be present in the building (e.g. out on home visits).
  • In any emergency, please dial 999 for an ambulance or attend the nearest Accident & Emergency department.

At present, GPs and their teams are under huge pressure – caring for more people with fewer resources.

Without proper investment, the safety, stability and continuity of care that patients value most are at risk.

As your GP practice, we will always do what we can to deliver the best service possible for you and your family. With the right resources and support, we could expand our services, employ more staff, and deliver the safe, timely, and personalised care you deserve.

Please remember that our current GP contract funds patient care on average at 31p per day per patient, which is not enough to meet rising demand and to provide the care you and your family deserve.

So please bear with us – and thank you for your support as we try our best for you and your family.

See NHS England’s You and Your General Practice document here: You and Your General Practice

Page last reviewed: 09 October 2025
Page created: 09 October 2025