At the annual conference of
LMCs GPs across the UK today, voted for the resignation of the
four UK Chief Medical Officers on the grounds of their
repeated refusal to remove target payments for GPs giving MMR.
Dr David Love, joint chairman of
the BMA's Scottish General Practitioners Committee said:
"GPs are in no doubt about the
safety and effectiveness of the MMR triple vaccine. However we
are opposed to government's continued refusal to remove target
payments for MMR which we see as counterproductive, unjust and
which run the risk of jeopardising the doctor patient
relationship."
Currently GPs have to reach a
target for the number of patients who receive the MMR triple
vaccine in order to receive payments for the immunisation.
Uptake rates have fallen in recent years which has made it
increasingly difficult for GPs to reach the targets, despite
spending time with parents helping them to make a choice based
on the best information available.
Dr Love added:
"GPs want patients to make an
informed choice about whether they would like to have their
children immunised with MMR. However there is a danger that
patients will think doctors are 'promoting' the triple vaccine
in order to make money. Removing the target will remove that
doubt.
"We have opposed the target
payment system since it was implemented in 1990. In recent
years, uptake rates of MMR have been falling and are currently
well below levels recommended for 'herd immunity' (95%). In
order to maintain the public's confidence in the triple
vaccine, GPs have been calling for the removal of the MMR
target system. Unfortunately, the Government has clearly not
been listening.
Ends
Note to Editors
The Chief Medical Officer for
Scotland is Dr Mac Armstrong.
GPs currently have to reach a
target of 90% to receive upper level payments for MMR. Figures
published by the Scottish Executive earlier this month
highlighted a further drop in uptake rates to 86%.
The motion debated today
unanimously supported the use of the MMR triple vaccine.