Principles of the NHS on the line

NHSGPs have been claimed that they might face demonstrations outside the operation and at the same time asking questions about the increased salaries.

The warning was released as a measure of an candid attack on government health policy claimed by the new chair of the Royal College of GPs.

In a recently conducted Saturday interview with the Guardian the new chief of the Royal College of GPs, Dr Clare Gerada, made proclamation attack on the government’s health care changes, as stated by the NHS will not survive.

By taking up the job of commissioners of services GPs which will be responsible for rationing decisions and patients refused for drugs or surgery for the diseases as one understandably vent their frustrations on well paid GPs, Dr Gerada reported by the Guardian.

She claimed that making GPs the “new rationers” of the NHS might wreck the long-established bonds of trust between them and their patients.

Dr Gerada said, "I think it is the end of the NHS as we currently know it, which is a national, unified health service, with central policies and central planning, in the way that [Aneurin] Bevan imagined. At worst, the negative impact for GPs could be patients lobbying outside their front door, saying, 'You've got a nice BMW car but you will not allow me to have this cytotoxic drug that will give me three more months of life.”