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BJGP Interviews

BJGP Interviews

Essential updates on the latest primary care research and clinical practice

The British Journal of General Practice

201 episodesEN

Show overview

BJGP Interviews has been publishing since 2021, and across the 5 years since has built a catalogue of 201 episodes. That works out to roughly 50 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a weekly cadence, with the show now in its 4th season.

Episodes typically run ten to twenty minutes — most land between 13 min and 16 min — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. It is catalogued as a EN-language Health & Fitness show.

The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 3 days ago, with 11 episodes already out so far this year. The busiest year was 2023, with 51 episodes published. Published by The British Journal of General Practice.

Episodes
201
Running
2021–2026 · 5y
Median length
15 min
Cadence
Weekly

From the publisher

Listen to BJGP Interviews for the latest updates on primary care and general practice research. Hear from researchers and clinicians who will update and guide you to the best practice. We all want to deliver better care to patients and improve health through better research and its translation into practice and policy. The BJGP is a leading international journal of primary care with the aim to serve the primary care community. Whether you are a general practitioner or a nurse, a researcher, we publish a full range of research studies from RCTs to the best qualitative literature on primary care. In addition, we publish editorials, articles on the clinical practice, and in-depth analysis of the topics that matter. We are inclusive and determined to serve the primary care community. BJGP Interviews brings all these articles to you through conversations with world-leading experts. The BJGP is the journal of the UK's Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP). The RCGP grant full editorial independence to the BJGP and the views published in the BJGP do not necessarily represent those of the College. For all the latest research, editorials and clinical practice articles visit BJGP.org (https://bjgp.org). If you want all the podcast shownotes plus the latest comment and opinion on primary care and general practice then visit BJGP Life (https://www.bjgplife.com).

Latest Episodes

View all 201 episodes

Choosing general practice: What shapes medical student decisions?

May 12, 202615 min

S4 Ep 229Looking back at the BJGP Research Conference 2026

Today, we’re going to back at the recent BJGP Research Conference, which was held just last week on the 20st of March 2025 in Bristol. TranscriptThis transcript was generated using AI and has not been reviewed for accuracy. Please be aware it may contain errors or omissions.Speaker A00:00:00.960 - 00:00:39.550Hello and welcome to this BJGP podcast. I'm Nada Khan and I'm one of the Associate Editors of the Journal. Thanks for listening today.In today's episode we're going to look back at the recent BJGP Research Conference which we held just last week on 20th March in Bristol. It was absolutely brilliant to welcome the BJGP team and people who attended to the Southwest.And in today's episode I'm just going to talk about some the highlights and really focus on what the conference is about and maybe have a chat about how to get involved in the future. But first, here's a welcome to the conference from our Editor in Chief, Ewan Lawson.Speaker B00:00:40.270 - 00:01:16.520My name's Ewan Lawson, I'm editor of the bjgp. So that means basically I'm the one person that the Journal would probably run without and everyone else does all the work.But I do have to stand up here and say hello to you and I want to offer you the warmest of welcomes to the conference. Been running this for a few years and it's always really nice to get together and just try to help each other, you know, get involved.It's not in a very scholarly way, you know, whether you're involved in research or whether you're interested in putting research into practice. We think we can offer you quite a lot more than just the fact that we publish research at BJGP and BJGP Open. So I hope you have a fantastic day.Speaker A00:01:17.320 - 00:03:26.850So this was the seventh run of the BJGP Research Conference and this year we had a particular focus on a few different areas.We took a bit of a deep dive into patient involvement, new and emerging research in general practice, general practice policy and how to get research into impact. And this year, as always, quite a bit around writing and also public speaking in academia.The conference kicked off this year with an absolutely brilliant talk by Professor Martin Marshall, who some of you may know as the Chair of the Nuffield Trust. But he's also Emeritus professor of Healthcare Improvement at UCS and non Exec Director at the Royal Devon University Healthcare trust.And until 2022, Martin was also the Chair of the Royal College of GPs and a GP in New East London. So definitely someone worth listening to about his experiences as well.And Martin really focused in his talk on the relationship between general practice and policy and asked a really important question, which is how good are we as a profession at influencing decision decision makers?And in his talk, Martin reflected on the fact that while the value of general practice is really well established for patients, communities and the wider nhs. It's often still misunderstood or undervalued at a policy level.And in his talk he challenged whether that's purely down to policymakers or whether, as Julian Tudor Hart once put it, there's also an element of political literacy within the profession itself.And what really followed was a thoughtful discussion about how both national leaders and individual clinicians can do more to shape policy, and whether that's through better communication, stronger advocacy, or even engaging more actively with the systems around us. It was a really thought provoking structure of the conference and linked closely to that broader theme of impact that ran throughout the day.Here's just a short snippet of Martin speaking at the conference.Speaker C00:03:27.570 - 00:04:45.260I wish I could have my career again and I'd be more influential than I was. I've learned a lot along the way, but this is what I've learned. First of all, as I've described, influencing is about far more than informy.It's not about telling, it's about getting inside people's heads and understanding what's important to them. A lot of influencing is about timing. How do we decide when to influence? I think it's really important. Policy windows is an interesting concept.So sometimes just a window opens that allows you to do something.And a good example of this would be the evidence around Continuity of care, which is actually pretty strong in General practice was largely ignored by policymakers and politicians until the pandemic came along and they were looking for a way of delivering the vaccination program. And we made the case based on evidence that trust is really important to the success of uptake of vaccination programs.And that's why government decided that general practice would deliver their program largely, rather than setting up a separate body to deliver it. So there's an example, another example of ways of change.The NUFRE is doing some really important work around the distribution, the resource distribution formula for general practice, something which the

Mar 24, 202612 min

S4 Ep 228Skill mix and patient trust in general practice

Today, we’re speaking to Dr Charlotte Paddison, who is currently non-executive director at Royal Papworth Hospital, and formerly a Senior Fellow and co-lead for Primary Care at the Nuffield Trust.Title of paper: Implications of skill-mix change in general practice: secondary analysis of data from the GP Patient SurveyAvailable at: https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2025.0360To the authors’ knowledge, no previous studies have investigated the impact on patient trust or perception of needs met when patients are unsure what type of health professional they have seen. Using data from a large national survey, this study found that patients expressed lower confidence and trust, and were less likely to report their needs were met in general practice consultations when they were not sure who their appointment was with. The results are novel in demonstrating that the combination of not knowing who you saw and a remote appointment is particularly problematic for patient trust.TranscriptThis transcript was generated using AI and has not been reviewed for accuracy. Please be aware it may contain errors or omissions.Speaker A00:00:01.600 - 00:00:58.530Hello and welcome to BJGP Interviews. I'm Nada Khan and I'm one of the Associate editors of the Journal. Thanks for taking the time today to listen to this podcast.In today's episode, we're speaking to Dr. Charlotte Patterson, who is currently non Executive Director at Royal Papworth Hospital and formerly a Senior fellow and co lead for Primary Care at the Nuffield Trust.We're here to discuss the paper she's recently published here in the BJGP titled Implications of Skill Mix Change in General Practice Secondary Analysis of Data from the GP Patient Survey.So, hi, Charlotte, it's really lovely to meet you and to talk about your work and I just really wanted to start by exploring how we know that the composition of the general practice team is evolving with the increasing scope of multidisciplinary work. Really? And I wondered if you could just give us some of the context for this work and what you wanted to do here.Speaker B00:00:58.850 - 00:02:04.870Absolutely. Nada.So what we really wanted to understand was how two big shifts in policy are shaping the experience of patients care when they come to the GP practice. Why do we think that was interesting or potentially important?Basically, we've seen two big changes happening at the same time in the last five years. So.So we've seen the shift to multi professional team working with many more different types of health professionals working in general practice and at the same time, separately, we've seen a massive increase in the number of appointments delivered remotely. So what we wanted to know is what those changes really mean for patients.We also know that some patients feel confused about who they're seeing and when they turn up to a GP appointment at the surgery, whether that's an appointment with a GP or a physician's associate or a social prescriber.And this led on to another really important question for us in this study, which is what happens when patients are confused or uncertain about who they've seen and what does that mean for patient trust? Those are the kinds of questions we wanted to answer.Speaker A00:02:05.350 - 00:02:39.730So this was an analysis of the 2023 GP Patient Survey, which is sent to patients registered in English general practices.And I think the key thing for this work and what you've outlined just in terms of what you're saying right here, was that the survey asks people who their last general practice appointment was with and whether they had confidence and trust in that person and if their needs were met. And just given what you were describing, I wanted to move straight on to what you found.What did the patient say about trust and how did it Vary by different patient characteristics.Speaker B00:02:40.050 - 00:03:27.890Sure. So what we found in relation to trust. Nada.Is that while every 2, 2 in every 3 patients reported they definitely had trust and confidence in the health professional they saw at their GP practice. And that's very positive.We also found at the same time, there's a minority of patients, around 7%, who reported they did not at all have confidence and trust in their last GP practice appointment. And we found that trust is lower among patients who are younger, from minoritised ethnic backgrounds and living in more deprived areas.So that's what we found in relation to trust. We also found that patients are confused about different roles of health professionals working in general practice.And we've found this is likely to affect around one in every 20 patients.Speaker A00:03:28.370 - 00:03:30.290That seems quite a lot, actually, doesn't it?Speaker B00:03:30.530 - 00:04:26.740Yes.And it's also we found, looking at the GP general practice patient survey, we found that the proportion of patients who feel confused about who they're seeing has gone up over time.What I can tell you is that

Mar 17, 202618 min

S4 Ep 227What happens in general practice before an emergency lung cancer diagnosis?

Today, we’re speaking to Marta Berglund, a Research Assistant and PhD candidate at University College London. Title of paper: Pre-diagnostic primary care consultations and imaging in emergency-diagnosed vs referred lung cancer patientsAvailable at: https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2025.0369It has been postulated that emergency diagnoses of cancer (which occurs frequently and confers a poorer prognosis) may relate to suboptimal diagnostic management in primary care, but evidence to support or refute this hypothesis is sparse. We found that emergency-diagnosed patients with lung cancer were less likely to present with relevant respiratory symptoms and had fewer chest imaging investigations before diagnosis compared to patients diagnosed via referred routes, indicating an important role of disease factors in emergency diagnosis.TranscriptThis transcript was generated using AI and has not been reviewed for accuracy. Please be aware it may contain errors or omissions.Speaker A00:00:01.200 - 00:01:06.690Hello and welcome to BJGP Interviews. I'm Nada Khan and I'm one of the Associate editors of the Journal. Thanks for listening to this podcast today.In today's episode, we're speaking to Marta Bergland. Marta is a research assistant and PhD candidate at university College London.She's recently published a paper here in the BJGP titled Pre Diagnostic Primary Care Consultations and Imaging in Emergency Diagnosed versus Referred Lung Cancer Patients.So, hi, Marta, it's really lovely to meet you and it's great to talk to you about cancer diagnosis, which is a really important area for general practice and also a topic we publish on quite a lot here in the bjgp. It's been fascinating reading this paper and it tackles a cancer that we really don't do well with here in the UK in terms of early diagnosis.But I wonder if you could just start off by telling us a little bit more about lung cancer and how it's actually often diagnosed, which can sometimes lead to some of those poor outcomes.Speaker B00:01:07.010 - 00:02:26.970So, as you said, lung cancer is one of the cancer sites in the UK where the majority or a large proportion of patients are diagnosed through the emergency route, also known as emergency presentations, which is when a patient is diagnosed after they present through an urgent hospital admission or an A and E attendance in the 30 days before diagnosis.And that could look like someone who has had a persistent cough for, say, two weeks, but didn't actually go to their gp, and then suddenly they have a more severe onset of symptoms like shortness of breath, and then they go to A and E and are referred to a chest X ray and then get diagnosed, which is a pathway that is associated with worse prognosis and worse outcomes after diagnosis. And the more preferred route, if you will, in England to diagnose patients is through primary care.So through the GP routine referral or the urgent suspected referral route.And that could look like someone who presents to primary care with cough or dyspneasia again, but then their GP refers them to a chest X ray and then they're diagnosed with lung cancer.Speaker A00:02:27.130 - 00:02:45.290And I guess I wanted to just before we talk about what you found, I wanted to just cover here again, what you mean by this term, that's diagnostic window, because you mentioned that a few times in the paper. But what does this actually mean?And it relates a bit back to some of what you're talking about, about people presenting with symptoms, isn't that right?Speaker B00:02:45.530 - 00:03:09.880So, for us, it's a measure of healthcare use before diagnosis, and it could be any healthcare use Measure like consultations, symptoms, blood test use, anything like that.And it's measuring when that changes compared to baseline before diagnosis, which can signal increased healthcare use associated with the subsequent diagnosis.Speaker A00:03:10.040 - 00:03:16.840Okay, so it just, I guess it's what it says on the tin. It's just that window, isn't it, of potentially being able to pick up a change.Speaker B00:03:17.490 - 00:03:25.970Exactly. So the idea is that if there is an increase long before diagnosis, then possibly there is an opportunity to diagnose these patients earlier.Speaker A00:03:26.450 - 00:04:09.190So this was a really big study using the CPRD and this is a database that a lot of the listeners will be familiar with.And you had a sample of a million patients registered with UK General Practice and then you looked at people diagnosed with cancer and their pre diagnosis rates of consultation like you were talking about, and also chest imaging by the different possible diagnosis routes. So either as an emergency, a routine or an urgent referral. But I really want to move straight to what you found here.Can you give us just an overview of how the different people in this analysis were eventually diagnosed with lung cancer? So were there a lot of emergency diagnoses here?Speaker B00:04:09.350 - 00:05:

Mar 10, 202613 min

S4 Ep 226Designing neighbourhood urgent care: A general practice perspective

Today, we’re speaking to Dr Mike Holmes, a GP in Yorkshire and Chair of Nimbuscare, a local GP-led multi-neighbourhood provider.Title of paper: Neighbourhood delivery of urgent care in North Yorkshire, UKAvailable at: https://bjgp.org/content/76/764/133Neighbourhood-based urgent care, led by GP Multineighbourhood providers, can reduce reliance on hospitals and NHS 111. Delivering urgent care in community settings is more cost effective than Urgent Treatment Centre and Emergency Departments attendances. Digital integration and shared clinical systems improve safety, responsiveness, and patient experience. Co-locating operational and clinical teams streamlines service delivery and enables operational and quality oversight. Sustained impact requires recurrent funding and performance measures that reflect system-wide improvement rather than single-provider metrics.

Mar 3, 202624 min

S4 Ep 225Delayed, declined, or disengaged? Understanding childhood vaccination patterns

Today, we’re speaking to Dr Karol Basta, a Public Health Registrar based in London.Title of paper: Predictors of Childhood Vaccination Uptake and Timeliness in a Diverse Urban PopulationAvailable at: https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2025.0319Childhood vaccination rates have declined in the UK, with inequalities in urban, deprived, and ethnically diverse populations. Previous studies have lacked individual-level clinical data or did not explore both uptake and timeliness. We analysed 13 years of routinely collected primary care data for over 37,000 children in a diverse London borough to identify predictors of uptake and timeliness. Distinct sociodemographic and clinical factors were associated with incomplete and delayed vaccination, offering timely insights as responsibility for vaccination services shifts closer to local systems and place-based commissioning.TranscriptThis transcript was generated using AI and has not been reviewed for accuracy. Please be aware it may contain errors or omissions.Speaker A00:00:00.880 - 00:00:52.000Hi and welcome to BJJP Interviews. I'm Nada Khan and I'm one of the associate editors of the Journal. Thanks for taking the time to listen to this podcast today.In today's episode, we're speaking to Dr. Carol Basta.Carol is a public health registrar based in London and we're here to talk about the paper she's recently published here in the bjgp, which is titled Predictors of Childhood Vaccination Uptake and Timeliness in a Diverse Urban Population. So, hi, Carol, it's really lovely to meet you and to talk about this work. And I guess just to start, I wanted to put this work into context.We know that in the uk, overall childhood vaccination rates have unfortunately been declining. Could you talk us through some of the current challenges around vaccination, especially in urban and diverse areas?Speaker B00:00:52.720 - 00:02:06.750Yep. So we know vaccinations are really powerful and cost effective tools we have in giving children the best start in life life.But unfortunately, in the UK, since 2012, the uptake has been declining and actually since 2021, none of the vaccines in England have reached the 95% target recommended by the WHO to stop communicable disease outbreaks. And the kind of negative consequences of this aren't just sort of future hypothetical risks.We've already been seeing vaccine preventable diseases such as measles and whooping cough resurgences, and this is especially in certain parts of the uk, such as London or the northwest of England. So no uptake of vaccines is decreasing and vaccine preventable diseases are increasing. But that's not the full picture.We also know, for example, following work done by, at the time, Public health England in 2017, there are avoidable inequalities across the childhood vaccination program nationally, for example, linked to deprivation, geography and ethnicity.However, what was missing was really kind of contemporary granular evidence on the social and clinical factors associated with unequal vaccine outcomes, especially in diverse urban environments.Speaker A00:02:06.990 - 00:02:16.670And I know this was highlighted as well during COVID but there is a mistrust of health services amongst some communities as well, which might be playing into this.Speaker B00:02:17.470 - 00:03:11.120Yeah, exactly.So at the time when I was working in Lamb of Council, we knew qualitatively from talking to our community and talking to our local GP partners, that there was kind of sense of rising mistrust in healthcare services, but also rising difficulties with actually access to services.And that doesn't just affect whether or not people can get the vaccine, for example, it also affects whether they can have conversations about vaccines and the kind of continuity of care and building up those relationships.And so this is what we had kind of on a local level, but we knew that there was also national feelings and sentiments around mistrust, not just national, but actually globally vaccination mistrust from the COVID 19 pandemic. And there were worries that this had run off into the childhood vaccination program as well, that it hadn't just confined itself to Covid vaccines.Speaker A00:03:11.440 - 00:03:41.490So this was a study looking at predictors of routine childhood vaccination from 40 general practices in Lambeth and London, which is a pretty ethnically and socioeconomic demographically diverse borough. And you looked here at the vaccination uptake and timeliness and some of the predictors for these. This was a really big sample.But just to underline the population here, tell us more about the demographics in Lambeth as a borough in terms of ethnicity, because that's where you were based when this work was done.Speaker B00:03:41.890 - 00:04:32.250Yeah, exactly.So Lambeth is an inner London borough and it is very ethnically diverse, it's very densely populated, but it also has some of the highest levels of deprivation in the country. And part of the str

Feb 24, 202619 min

S4 Ep 224From swabs to urine sampling: Rethinking cervical screening in general practice

Today, we’re speaking to Prof Emma Crosbie, Professor of Gynaecological Oncology based at the University of Manchester.Title of paper: Urine human papillomavirus testing for cervical screening in a UK general screening population: a diagnostic test accuracy studyAvailable at: https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2025.0105The switch from primary cytology to primary human papillomavirus testing has enabled innovations in self-sampling for cervical screening. This study shows that urine self-collected with a first-void urine collection device has similar diagnostic test accuracy and acceptability to cervical sampling in a general screening population. Urine self-sampling has real-world potential as an alternative cervical screening option.TranscriptThis transcript was generated using AI and has not been reviewed for accuracy. Please be aware it may contain errors or omissions.Speaker A00:00:01.440 - 00:01:07.140Hello and welcome to BJGP Interviews. I'm Nada Khan and I'm one of the Associate Editors of the bjgp. Thanks for listening to this podcast today.In today's episode, we're speaking to Professor Emma Crosby, who is professor of Gynecological Oncology based at the University of Manchester. We're here to talk about her really exciting paper that's recently been published in the December 2025 issue of the BJGP.The paper is titled Urine Human Papillovirus Testing for Cervical Screening in UK General Screening Population A Diagnostic Test Accuracy Study. So, hi Emma, it's lovely to meet you and to talk about this paper.I really just wanted to start off talking a bit around cervical screening in the uk, and you mentioned this in the introduction to the paper as well, that cervical screening really does have variable uptake rates and we know that there are some, some barriers to access. But can you talk us through these and tell us a bit about why you decided to do this research?Speaker B00:01:07.940 - 00:03:41.440So, as you've just really nicely summarised, cervical screening is really important weapon against cervical cancer.So we know that it prevents cervical cancer and since the introduction of the NHS Cervical Screening program in the UK, we've seen deaths from cervical cancer drop by around 70%. So we know that it's very effective.But in the uk, the number of people attending is declining year on year and currently, currently only around 68% of those people who are eligible for cervical screening actually attend. There are a whole range of different reasons for non attendance.These include things to do with the speculum examination, so having to have an intimate examination to be examined. The anticipated embarrassment or fear of pain related to that procedure, I think are important barriers.But there are also barriers associated with access to reaching screening appointments, taking time off work, having childcare and so on and so forth. So we thought that there was some really important barriers there that could potentially be addressed by self sampling.Now, vaginal self sampling is actually been incorporated in many cervical screening programs around the world.Some cervical screening programs are using it just for people who are non attenders or underscreened by traditional screening routes and other countries are using it as a choice for everybody.Now, in the uk, we haven't yet taken up vaginal self sampling sampling, but it will be introduced this year in 2026, principally for under screened groups. And there is some work looking at whether or not it will be introduced as a choice for everyone in the future.But we know from research that's been done in the UK that only around 12 to 13% of people who are offered vaginal self sampling who are under screened actually return a sample. And therefore it clearly doesn't address all the barriers to cervical screening. And we wondered whether a urine test would have more app.It would have the same benefits of vaginal self sampling in that it can be collected at home and posted to the laboratory. So it removes that need for an intimate examination.It removes the need for, you know, making an appointment at a healthcare facility to have your screen taken, but it perhaps, you know, removes some of the barriers towards putting a swab inside the vagina that might be culturally or religiously unacceptable to some groups. And so we thought that a urine self sample could be another option for people who currently aren't screened.And so we wanted to see how accurate it was in this study.Speaker A00:03:42.320 - 00:04:03.760And those issues around access are really important, especially in this population of women who are juggling lots of caring responsibilities with young children or caring for older relatives as well.So sometimes it is just difficult to get to an appointment and, you know, juggling work hours and things which often then coincide with GP opening hours as well.Speaker B00:04:03.920 - 00:04:41.960Yeah, absolutely.And we, we have seen a drop in people, you know,

Feb 17, 202615 min

S4 Ep 223Trust matters: A practice-level look at patient confidence in health professionals

Today, we’re speaking to Professor Richard Baker, emeritus Professor at the University of Leicester. Title of paper: Factors influencing confidence and trust in health professionals: a cross-sectional study of English general practices.Available at: https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2025.0154A transactional model of general practice is being introduced to improve access that involves triage and increasing percentages of appointments with professionals other than GPs or that are not face-to-face. Using summary data about almost all English general practices in 2023-24 with 750 or more patients, the patient-reported levels of confidence and trust from the General Practice Patient Survey were associated with increased percentages of appointments that were with GPs or were face-to-face, and with higher continuity, after adjusting for other practice and patient factors. Confidence and trust was lower in practices with fewer appointments per year per patient, fewer patients having their needs met, greater deprivation, fewer patients of White ethnicity, and in practices located in London, as compared to other regions of England. Access to general practice needs improving, but the findings of this cross-sectional study suggest that preserving features of relationship-based care is also needed to maintain patients’ trust and confidence in health professionals.TranscriptThis transcript was generated using AI and has not been reviewed for accuracy. Please be aware it may contain errors or omissions.Speaker A00:00:01.200 - 00:00:46.980Hello and welcome to BJGP Interviews. I'm Nada Khan and I'm one of the Associate editors of the Journal. Thanks for joining us here to listen to this podcast today.In today's episode, we're speaking to Professor Richard Baker, Emeritus professor at the University of Leicester. We're here to talk about the paper that he and his colleagues have recently published here in the bjjp.The paper is titled Factors Influencing Confidence and Trust in Healthcare A Cross Sectional Study of English General Practices. So, hi, Richard, thanks for joining me here today and it's nice to see you again.Just before we talk about this paper, I wonder if you could just talk to me about trust and why you think it's important in general practice interactions.Speaker B00:00:47.780 - 00:01:32.060Well, it's difficult to have a consultation with a patient if they don't trust you. I mean, it's just very basic, a very basic level, very simple level. But there's lots of evidence as well that trust is important.People who trust you are more likely to follow your advice. They're more likely to take the medication.They're more likely therefore, to come back and see you again, more likely to use services appropriately in the future. And there's some evidence that the outcomes are better if there's trust there. Trust obviously should be earned.You can't take it for granted, you've got to be trustable. But it's obviously very important for clinical practice and essentially always has been, hasn't it, really? Going back to the.The Greek doctors, trust was important then, just as it is now.Speaker A00:01:32.460 - 00:01:38.540And you mentioned about different outcomes. So what sort of outcomes do we know could be associated with trust?Speaker B00:01:39.180 - 00:02:07.990Just use of services is one example.So you can get people who, if they don't trust who they see, they go and see someone else and again, and so they overuse services and that waste resources.On the other hand, you may get people who just won't come, so they'll delay presenting with the problems because they don't trust the provider to get it right. Then they risk of poor outcomes as a consequence of that. So it's a whole mixture of things.Speaker A00:02:09.030 - 00:02:21.190So what were you trying to do in the study?So you wanted to look at trust and how it impacted on patient outcomes, or was it more about sort of the predictors and associations with trust, isn't it?Speaker B00:02:21.800 - 00:04:33.330Yes, I think we were conscious that general practice has gone through a lot of change.The big changes came about during the pandemic as to how general practice is delivered, how people have their appointments and things have sort of Reverted a bit to how they were, but only partially in terms of who you get to see face to face, appointment and so on. And we were asking the question, well, what has been the consequence of this?Should we be thinking about confidence and trust in association with these changes?I mean, the changes may have been absolutely essential because we just don't have the capacity in general practice to do everything that we would like to do for an increasingly multi morbid population. But what are the consequences? How do we need to respond? How do we need to respond?Questions I guess for follow on from Is there a link between confidence and trust and these changes in general practice changes?I think when we looked at this, we've sort of grouped th

Feb 10, 202617 min

S4 Ep 222Belonging, autonomy and burnout: Why GPs leave

Today, we’re speaking to Dr Laura Jefferson, Senior Research Fellow based at the University of Manchester. We’re here to discuss her paper recently published here in the BJGP titled, ‘Understanding persistent GP turnover using work and personal characteristics: a retrospective observational study’.Title of paper: Understanding persistent GP turnover using work and personal characteristics: a retrospective observational studyDOI: https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2025.0260GP turnover rates from national administrative datasets have previously been used to explore practice-level factors associated with turnover and its relationship to patient. outcomes. The individual and work characteristics associated with turnover is less well understood, with much research focusing on intentions to leave or smaller samples of GPs leaving practice. This study sought to fill this research gap, through analysis of a large dataset of GPs working experiences linked to turnover, understanding potential predictors that may offer solutions to the workforce crisis being faced in general practice. We find that GPs’ sense of autonomy, belonging and competence are significantly lower in practices with problems with persistent turnover and demonstrate how satisfaction with work characteristics such as working hours and experiences of strained relationships differs in practices with persistent turnover. TranscriptThis transcript was generated using AI and has not been reviewed for accuracy. Please be aware it may contain errors or omissions.Speaker A00:00:00.880 - 00:00:53.050Hello and welcome to BJGP Interviews. My name is Nada Khan and I'm one of the Associate editors of the bjgp. Thanks for joining us here to listen to this podcast today.In today's episode, we're speaking to Dr. Laura Jefferson, who is a senior research fellow based at the University of Manchester.We're here to discuss her paper, recently published here in the journal, titled Understanding Persistent GP Turnover Using Work and Personal A Retrospective Observational Study.So, hi, Laura, it's really nice to see you again and to talk about this research and I suppose I really just wanted to frame our discussion here today by saying that there's been a lot of talk recently about the retention crisis in UK general practice, but I wonder, could you just talk us through how big is the scale of the problem that we're dealing with here?Speaker B00:00:53.370 - 00:02:12.110Yeah, thank you. Yeah, well, thank you for inviting me to talk to you today as well.I think it's interesting, we hear a lot of discussion in the media and in our research evidence as well, recently about an increase in GP turnover. In the past sort of decade, there's been a gradual increase, so that's in terms of GPs leaving medicine, but also moving across practices.And it's good to see a kind of change in policy focus from historically, a lot of policies focused on recruitment of GPS. So, you know, we've had like, pledges to have 6,000 GPS that have not been met and it's often kind of criticized as filling a leaky bucket.So if we try and obviously pay a lot. So I think it's approximately half a million pounds to train a gp, but actually to replace the GP is really expensive as well.So it's about £300,000 to replace the GP.And so, yeah, so there's a positive focus to thinking about retention, but actually it's about how can we do that effectively and understanding that the sort of one size fits all approach doesn't necessarily work and that there's different gps with different needs.Speaker A00:02:12.590 - 00:02:36.830And this was a study where you were looking at the association between high practice turnover of GPs and GP job satisfaction. And what you did was you linked data from different general practice practices and GP workforce surveys.But the first thing I wanted to really look into was that you identified these high turnover practices. What exactly did this mean?Speaker B00:02:37.070 - 00:04:33.190Yeah, so there's been previous research that's done this before, so it's using. We're really fortunate in the UK that we've got really good workforce data compared to a lot of other countries.So we have longitudinal data going back a long way that we can use for research purposes to try and understand more about these trends.So colleagues of mine at Manchester have previously used this data from NHS Digital, which is now NHS England, linking with data on gps by General Practice, which is has got data on their kind of start and leave dates in a practice. And that allows us to track where gps are moving out of a practice and how long they've stayed there for.So they've previously looked at sort of persistent turnover as being categorized as a practice where they have consistently, for three years running, had a 10% turnover of GPS. So this is where it seems to be a more worrying turnover figure.I think it's expected that there's going to be some level of turnover and some level of turnover that might be a usefu

Feb 3, 202615 min

S4 Ep 221BJGP Top 10 research most read and published in 2025

This episode, we have a round table discussion with the editorial team of Sam Merriel, Tom Round and Nada Khan. This collection of the BJGP’s top 10 research most read and published in 2025 brings together high-profile primary care research and clinical innovation.And here are the top 10 most read papers of 2025:10Adoption of clinical pharmacist roles in primary care: longitudinal evidence from English general practicehttps://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2024.03209Factors affecting prostate cancer detection through asymptomatic prostate-specific antigen testing in primary care in England: evidence from the 2018 National Cancer Diagnosis Audithttps://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2024.03768Paramedic or GP consultations in primary care: prospective study comparing costs and outcomeshttps://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2024.04697What patients want from access to UK general practice: systematic reviewhttps://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2024.05826Technostress, technosuffering, and relational strain: a multi-method qualitative study of how remote and digital work affects staff in UK general practicehttps://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2024.03225Antidepressants and risk of postural hypotension: a self-controlled case series study in UK primary carehttps://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2024.04294Challenges to quality in contemporary, hybrid general practice a multi-site longitudinal case studyhttps://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2024.01843Low-dose amitriptyline for irritable bowel syndrome: a qualitative study of patients’ and GPs’ views and experienceshttps://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2024.03032Artificial intelligence for early detection of lung cancer in GPs’ clinical notes: a retrospective observational cohort studyhttps://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2023.04891Effectiveness of low-dose amitriptyline and mirtazapine in patients with insomnia disorder and sleep maintenance problems: a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial in general practice (DREAMING)https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2024.0173TranscriptThis transcript was generated using AI and has not been reviewed for accuracy. Please be aware it may contain errors or omissions.Speaker A00:00:00.480 - 00:01:27.500Hello and welcome to the BJGP Top 10 podcast.So this is where we take a closer look at the most read research papers in the BJGP in 2025 and just have a discussion about what they mean for day to day general practice. I'm Nada Khan, one of the associate editors of the Journal.And in today's episode we'll be exploring some of the themes that really captured attention with the readership, I suppose. And we'll be talking about things like consultation compl complexity and workload pressures.Some work around diagnostic uncertainty and how to look, look after people with multimorbidity.And I think we're going to have a discussion a bit more, not just about what these papers found, but maybe a bit about why they resonated and maybe give a bit of editorial feedback around that. And because it's a conversation here between three clinicians as well.And I'll go around and introduce everyone in a minute, maybe a bit about what they add to the conversations we're already already having in practice and where the gaps still are. And I guess with that we'll be keeping it grounded in the messy reality of today's general practice as well.So I've introduced myself and I'm joined here by Tom Round and Sam Merrill, who are both also associate editors of the bjgp. But I'll go to Tom first. So, yeah, tell us a bit about who you are and how is your day going?Speaker B00:01:27.720 - 00:01:59.550Great, Nada. Thanks for having me.So, Dr. Tom Rand, I'm a GP in northeast London and an academic clinical lecturer at King's College, interested in early disease and cancer detection and also health inequality. So, yeah, pretty good. Like everyone, I've got a mild cold at the moment.I think exactly the same last year when we did this podcast, winter cold season. So I think we're all sort of feeling that a little bit in primary care with flus and other things and staff, you know, so otherwise good.Looking forward to having really interesting discussion about these papers which are really fascinating and give a real broad breadth of what we do in general practice.Speaker A00:02:00.420 - 00:02:07.940Great. And Sam, we'll go to you and you have some really exciting news in the background as well.So, yeah, tell us about who you are and what you're up to today.Speaker C00:02:08.180 - 00:02:31.770Thanks, Nad.I think, yeah, you're alluding to the fact I'm on Puppy alert because our new addition to the family in the winter is keeping us busy and making remote working a challenge. But we're getting through. But yeah, lovely to be with you guys. And I catch up and BJGP and wider podcast audience.So, yes, I'm a GP working in the Northwest of England and a clinical senior lecture at the University of Manchester.Speaker A00:02:32.650 - 00:04:28.830Brilliant.Okay, so let's get into the top 10 most read research and published papers of 2025 and I'm going to kic

Jan 27, 202640 min

S4 Ep 220Safety incidents in prison healthcare: Lessons from critical illness

Today, we’re speaking to Dr Joy McFadzean,a GP in Swansea and Clinical Lecturer of Patient Safety based at Cardiff University. We’re here to talk about the paper she’s recently published here in the BJGP alongside her colleagues titled, ‘Critical illness in prisons: a multi-method analysis of reported healthcare safety incidents in England’.Title of paper: Critical illness in prisons: a multi-method analysis of reported healthcare safety incidents in EnglandAvailable at: https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2025.0239Using a mixed-methods descriptive and framework analysis, this paper provides new insights into the complexity of care delivery in prisons. Results resonate with and strengthen the recommendations from recent investigations into prison healthcare by further developing an understanding of the complex intersecting factors contributing to safety incidents and quality issues in care delivery. The fundamental importance of good quality and adequately resourced primary care delivery in prisons has been highlighted. It also identifies system-wide interventions that are needed to improve care delivery, and which are likely to interest policy-makers and scrutiny bodies, commissioners and teams working in prisons to inform developments in strategic health needs assessments, workforce profiling, and training requirements for healthcare and prison teams.FundingThis study/project is funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Policy Research Programme (PR-R20-0318-21001). The views expressed are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the NIHR or the Department of Health and Social Care. The funders of the study had no role in study design, data collection, data analysis, data interpretation, writing of the manuscript or the decision to submit.TranscriptThis transcript was generated using AI and has not been reviewed for accuracy. Please be aware it may contain errors or omissions.Speaker A00:00:00.560 - 00:01:10.200Hello and welcome to BJGP Interviews. I'm Nada Khan and I'm one of the associate editors of the bjgp. Welcome back to the first season of the BJGP podcast here in 2026.And we're starting off this season of the podcast with a chat with Dr. Joy McFadyn. Joy is a GP based in Swansea and clinical lecturer of Patient safety based at Cardiff University.We're here to talk about the paper she's recently published here in the BJGP alongside her colleagues. The paper is titled Critical Illness in Prisons A Multi Method Analysis of Reported Healthcare Safety Incidents in England.So, hi, Joy, it's really lovely to meet you and to talk about this research, but yeah, just taking a step back, I think it's fair to say that the prison population is an underserved and probably fairly under researched population as well.But you point out here in the paper that it's not only this, but that the prison population is actually at a much higher risk of early mortality as well. So can you talk us through this at all?Speaker B00:01:10.680 - 00:02:31.010Yeah, that's a really good point. So we know that people who reside in prison, known as prisoners, will have very high rates of physical and mental health needs.And as you say, there are concerns that they have rates of premature mortality, so they may die up to 20 years earlier than the rest of the population. But they are a population which isn't necessarily the area of focus.So even though we know the importance of supporting their healthcare as a public health concern, they are often underserved, they're quite vulnerable, and yet there hasn't been enough research to support them to have what we call equivalent health outcomes. So there are lots of definitions of what is considered to be equivalence of care for people in prisons.So the Royal College of General Practitioners Secure Environments Group, they have defined what equivalence of care is for people in prisons, thinking that they should have the same quality of care, the same level of staffing, the same resources as anyone who is residing in the community in order to get the same health outcome. And currently that is not being realised.Speaker A00:02:31.330 - 00:02:38.210And just as a background to all this work, how many of these early deaths do you think are preventable?Speaker B00:02:38.930 - 00:03:39.270So we carried out a study which was called the Avoidable Harm in Prison Study. So it was focusing very much on healthcare events where people were harmed or could have been harmed whilst they reside in prisons.So our focus is very much on these patient safety incidents, reports and incidents themselves, and ultimately the findings of the other space of the study. We haven't released yet they're still embargoed.But we were seeing within our sample of patient safety incident reports, events where prisoners were undertaking significant harm. So within our paper, we haven't seen any evidence of the deaths which could be considered to be avoidable.But our focus was very much on events whe

Jan 20, 202621 min

S3 Ep 219Faecal calprotectin in the over-50s: Rule-out test or red flag?

Today, we’re speaking to Dr Rob Perry, who is a Gastroenterology Clinical Research Fellow based at Imperial College London.Title of paper: Evaluating the Role of Faecal Calprotectin in Older AdultsAvailable at: https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2025.0169There is considerable uncertainty surrounding the use of FC as a diagnostic test in older adults, with varying suggestions in guidelines and a lack of data in the wider literature. This study investigates the performance of FC in older adults (≥50 years), compared to a younger cohort, with a view to guide its correct use in a primary care setting. These data suggest that FC is a sensitive test for IBD and organic gastrointestinal pathology in both groups. However, concerns remain over its PPV and specificity, particularly in older adults, and it should not be used if colorectal cancer is suspected.Transcript This transcript was generated using AI and has not been reviewed for accuracy. Please be aware it may contain errors or omissions.Speaker A00:00:00.880 - 00:00:49.180Hello and welcome to BJGP Interviews. I'm Nada Khan and I'm one of the Associate Editors of the bjgp. Thanks for taking the time today to listen to this podcast. Today we're speaking to Dr.Rob Perry, who is a gastroenterology Clinical Research Fellow based at Imperial College London. We're here to talk about the paper he's recently published here in the BJGP titled Evaluating the Role of Fecal Calprotectin in Older Adults.So thanks, Rob, for joining me here to talk about your work.And I guess I just really want to preface this by saying that a lot has changed in the last few years just in terms of testing for inflammatory bowel disease and bowel cancer in general practice. But I wonder if you could just talk us through this, some of the different guidelines and why you wanted to do this study.Speaker B00:00:49.660 - 00:02:24.450Oh, yes, thank you for having me.Firstly, and the rationale for the study is that, you know, consultations for gastrointestinal symptoms make up a large number of consultations in primary care. I think the figures around 10%.And whilst fecal cow protection is an increasingly well established test for differentiating between inflammatory bowel disease and functional or other gastrointestinal or non inflammatory gastrointestinal diseases, its role in older adults is far less well established.With varying guidelines for clinicians in primary care, the NICE guidelines make no specific mention, for example, of age, other than that calprotectin should not be used where age is considered a risk factor in the context of certain symptoms. For suspicion of cancer, the BSG guidelines on IBD use a cutoff of 40, above which they suggest calprotectin is not used.The something called the NICE York Fecal cow protectant care pathway suggests an age cut above 60, which is a NICE endorsed pathway. So there's some uncertainty there in the literature about which cutoff should be used for fecal cow protectin.And the reason any cutoff is suggested is because data has previously shown that calprotectin lacks sensitivity for diagnosing colorectal cancer.And as age is considered a risk factor for colorectal cancer, guidelines normally mandate earlier endoscopic evaluation of patients with GI symptoms in older age groups.Speaker A00:02:24.530 - 00:02:39.170And can you just talk us through briefly what you did here? So you looked at patients referred for a colonoscopy at one single centre, so at Imperial College Healthcare Trust.But just talk us through briefly who was included in the study and what were you looking at specifically?Speaker B00:02:40.380 - 00:04:04.090So looking at patients where calprotectin was being used for diagnostic purposes, so calprotectin is also, as you probably know, well established for monitoring patients with existing ibd, monitoring response to treatment for flares, et cetera. We were just looking at patients where it was being used for diagnostic purposes. So any patients with existing IBD were excluded from the study.And then, yes, as you said, anyone who had a calprotectin within a six month period back in 2021, who then subsequently within a one year period had a colonoscopy performed at Imperial, which is the local referral centre, that were included in the study. And we only looked at adult patients. We had a cohort of older adults which we used to cut 50 and above, and a younger cohort below that.We didn't look at pediatric cases, that was how we selected patients.And then we reviewed available electronic documentation to ascertain the diagnosis of the patient, looking at clinic betters etc, as well as looking at other tests that patients may have had performed when their symptoms are being evaluated. Fit testing, for example. We also looked at CRP and haemoglobin.By collecting that data, we were able to ascertain the diagnostic performance of chiroprotectin in the two respective cohorts. And also in comparison with some of the other clinical tests that I mention

Nov 11, 202514 min

S3 Ep 218Antidepressants in pregnancy: A closer look at miscarriage risk

Today, we’re speaking to Flo Martin, an honorary research associate at the University of Bristol.Title of paper: First trimester antidepressant use and miscarriage: a comprehensive analysis in the Clinical Practice Research Datalink GOLDAvailable at: https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2025.0092Antidepressant use during pregnancy is rising, with concerns from pregnant women that these medications may increase the risk of miscarriage if taken prenatally. Evidence is conflicting so we used the Clinical Practice Research Datalink, a large repository of UK-based primary care data, and a range of methods to investigate antidepressant use during trimester one and risk of miscarriage.TranscriptThis transcript was generated using AI and has not been reviewed for accuracy. Please be aware it may contain errors or omissions.Speaker A00:00:00.240 - 00:00:52.800Hello and welcome to BJJP Interviews. I'm Nada Khan and I'm one of the associate editors at the bjgp. Thanks for taking the time today to listen to this podcast.In today's episode, we're speaking to Dr. Flo Martin, an honorary research associate at the University of Bristol.We're here to look at the paper she's recently published here in the BJGP titled First Trimester Antidepressant Use and Miscarriage A Comprehensive Analysis in the Clinical Practice Research Data Link. Gold. So, hi, Flo, it's great to meet you and talk about this research.And I think this paper touches on an area that clinicians and women often approach with a bit of uncertainty, just in terms of prescribing safety, really, in pregnancy in general. But can you talk us through what we know already about prescribing for antidepressants and risk in pregnancy, just to frame what you've done here?Speaker B00:00:53.280 - 00:02:22.860Yeah, absolutely.So we actually did some work a couple of years ago doing a systematic review of the literature in this space, so looking at antidepressant use during pregnancy and the risk of miscarriage. And the work spanned the last kind of 30 years.And what we found was a 30% increase in risk of miscarriage following antidepressant use during pregnancy. And this was obviously kind of alarming to see this increase in risk. But the kind of key takeaway from the paper was not actually this finding.It was mostly the kind of variation in the literature that we observed when answering this question.We kind of were very cautious about interpreting this 30% increase in risk as a kind of true causal effect because we had observed these other things that might be driving the estimate kind of upwards and might not necessarily show the true effect that was happening in this population. So that was kind of the environment that we were existing in before we started the study.And it really informed the way that we wanted to do this study.So we thought it was really important to try and understand that baseline risk in both unexposed and exposed pregnancies, so that whatever we observed was contextualized against what the underlying risk was among those who hadn't been prescribed antidepressants.Speaker A00:02:23.500 - 00:02:58.120Yeah, fair enough.So this is a large analysis of the clinical practice research data link, and you looked at pregnancies between 1996 and 2016 and then followed up women who had been prescribed or not antidepressants and risk of miscarriage.And I think if people are specifically interested in how you did this, they can go back to the paper and look at some of the different methods you used. But I wanted to focus really on what you found here.And I think the first thing to point out is that it wasn't uncommon for women to have a prescription for an antidepressant in that first trimester of pregnancy. So talk us through that.Speaker B00:02:58.440 - 00:03:43.270Yeah, exactly. So I think we. We kind of report about 7% of the pregnancies in our study that had been prescribed antidepressants.And I think, as you say, this is, you know, potentially higher than what you would expect. I think there are kind of multiple things driving this.If we look outside of pregnancy and kind of zoom out and look at the prescribing rates of antidepressants in both men and women, we can see it's going up, you know, between the 1990s and the late sort of 20 teens. And.And I think, yeah, people will be maybe surprised to see, but it's very, you know, on trend with what we're seeing outside of pregnancy and then looking.Speaker A00:03:43.270 - 00:03:45.950Specifically at the risk of miscarriage here. What did you find?Speaker B00:03:47.150 - 00:04:59.060Yeah, so when we applied our kind of primary analysis where we were looking at pregnancies who had been prescribed antidepressants in trimester one, and comparing them to pregnancies who were not prescribed antidepressants in trimester one, we found a very, very small increase in relative risk. So I think we found about 4% increase in risk of miscarriage among the prescribed group than. Than the non prescribed.And what this translated to in

Nov 4, 20259 min

S3 Ep 217Not one size fits all: Accessing menopause care in the NHS

Today, we’re speaking to Claire Mann, a Research Fellow who is based at the University of Warwick, and Sarah Hillman, who is a GP and Clinical Associate Professor based at the University of Birmingham.Title of paper: Accessing Equitable Menopause Care in the Contemporary NHS – Women’s ExperiencesAvailable at: https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2024.0781Menopause awareness has increased in recent years, as well as HRT use, however, this has not been experienced equally. Cultural influences such as stigma, preferences for non-medical approaches, perceptions of ailments appropriate for healthcare, lack of representation, work against women seeking help. GPs should not assume all women who would benefit from HRT will advocate for it. They ought to initiate discussions about potential HRT, as well as other approaches, with all presenting women who may benefit.TranscriptThis transcript was generated using AI and has not been reviewed for accuracy. Please be aware it may contain errors or omissions.Speaker A00:00:00.240 - 00:01:12.020Hello and welcome to BJGP Interviews. I'm Nada Khan and I'm one of the Associate editors of the bjgp. Thanks for taking the time today to listen to this podcast.In today's episode, we're talking to Claire Mann, a research fellow who's based at the University of Warwick, and Sarah Hillman, who is a GP and Clinical Associate professor based at the University of Birmingham.We're here to discuss the recent paper published here in the BJGP titled Accessing Equitable Menopause Care in the Contemporary NHS Women's Experiences. Thanks, Claire and Sarah, for joining me here today to talk about this work.This study focuses particularly on the women's experience of menopause and accessing general practice and primary care. But I'll point out just before we begin that you've also published a linked paper looking at the clinician perspective.So anyone who's interested in that angle should look up your other paper. But back to this one. Sarah, I wonder if I could start with you first.I wonder if you could just talk us through the focus of the paper here and the kind of disparities that different women might face in accessing menopause care in the UK.Speaker B00:01:13.620 - 00:02:57.750Essentially, this work came about because in 2020, we published a piece of work in the BJGP that looked at prescribing a practice level of hrt.And what we found was that actually, if you were a patient at one of the most deprived practices in England, you were about a third less likely to be prescribed HRT than if you were in the most affluent. What we didn't have at that point in time was data at an individual level, just at a practice level.But it was important that work was done because that really pushed that forwards. But what we didn't understand was what was going on underneath that. So.So we asked the nihr, we wrote a grant for something called Research for Patient Benefit and said, look, we want to explore exactly why there is this disparity, because our feeling as researchers was that it wasn't straightforward and that there was a lot going on, both from the woman's perspective and the healthcare professional's perspective. And we really wanted to know exactly how that was all adding up to this gap in prescribing.What we did was we spoke to 40 women, but we were incredibly mindful that we wanted to speak to women that were less likely on paper to be prescribed hrt. So we tried to speak to women that were from more socially economically deprived areas and also black and South Asian women.So this project really was. Was underlying that. That gap.Speaker A00:02:57.910 - 00:03:31.880Yeah.And I guess, as you said, based on that previous research, you really wanted to get this deeper understanding of what was shaping menopause and HRT management and prescribing patterns.And I think just to sort of move on to what you found, really, I thought that one of the initial things that really stood out to me was the women that you spoke to talked about the menopause and how menopause care has changed over generations and how that impacts how women seek help. And I wonder if you could just start by talking us through this and what the women you spoke to told you.Speaker C00:03:31.880 - 00:05:16.160It's a really interesting study because obviously the time is right to be talking about menopause. It's going through this phenomenal change.And a lot of the women that we spoke to reflected on how that change had impacted their lives and how different their experiences might have been from the. The previous generation. A lot of women talked about when it came to menopause, they wanted to know about their mum and their mum's experiences.That's often a first port of call.But actually what a lot, particularly of the black and Asian women were telling us was that they were experiencing a different life to their own mum, that there were different pressures now, particularly in terms of being career driven, juggling intergenerational family

Oct 28, 202515 min

S3 Ep 216Counting GPs: When definitions change the workforce picture

Today, we’re speaking to Dr Luisa Pettigrew, a GP and Research Fellow at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and Senior Policy Fellow at the Health Foundation.Title of paper: Counting GPs: A comparative repeat cross-sectional analysis of NHS general practitionersAvailable at: https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2024.0833There have been successive Government promises to increase GP numbers. However, the numbers of GPs in NHS general practice depend upon how GPs are defined and how data are analysed. This paper provides a comprehensive picture of trends in GP capacity in English NHS general practice between 2015 and 2024. It shows that the number of fully qualified GPs working in NHS general practice is not keeping pace with population growth and there is increasing variation in the number of patients per GP between practices. We offer research and policy recommendations to improve the consistency and clarity of reporting GP workforce statistics.TranscriptThis transcript was generated using AI and has not been reviewed for accuracy. Please be aware it may contain errors or omissions.Speaker A00:00:01.040 - 00:01:04.810Hello and welcome to BJGP Interviews. I'm Nada Khan and I'm one of the Associate Editors of the Journal. Thanks for taking the time today to listen to this podcast.In today's episode, we're speaking to Dr. Louisa Pettigrew, who is a GP and research fellow at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.Louisa is also a Senior Policy Fellow at the Health foundation and we're here today to talk about the paper that she's recently published here in the bjgp. The paper is titled Counting A Comparative Repeat Cross Sectional analysis of NHS GPs.So, hi, Louisa, and thanks for joining me here today to talk about your work. And I guess just to set things out, it is really important to know how many gps there are working.But I wonder if you could just talk us through what we already know about this. We know that there have been successive government policies and promises to increase the number of gps.There are, as we know, different ways that gps could be counted.Speaker B00:01:05.530 - 00:02:37.470So, yeah, as you rightly point out, there's been recurrent governance promises to increase GP numbers.Not just our current Labour government, but the previous Conservative government too, and previous governments too, because they realize that, you know, having access to GP is important for the public and there's a shortage, a perceived shortage of them.So the issue that we notice that there's different ways to count GPs who are working NHS General practice, and therefore depending on how you choose to count them, then that affects the trends and it affects your numbers.So you can count a GP by headcount, whether they're working in NHS general practice or not, and you can count them by full time equivalent, so the actual reported numbers of working hours. You can also consider GPs to be fully qualified GPs alone, or you could include GPs who are fully qualified, plus what is categorized as GP trainees.Now, that category includes GP trainees, but it also includes foundation year one and two doctors and any other sort of junior doctor that might be in general practice. And the other dimension to how you count gps is whether you take population growth into population size.So in the UK, over the past, sort of between 2015 and 2024, which was a period of analysis of our study, there was about 12% increase in population size in England. So once you take population growth into account, that again, changes your trends and your current figures.Speaker A00:02:38.510 - 00:02:46.830And in this paper you used a few different ways to calculate the number of gps. But just talk us through briefly the data sets that you used here to look at that.Speaker B00:02:46.990 - 00:03:45.590So we use the nhs, England's GP workforce data set that provides both national figures and practice level figures.So we use the national figures to look at the overall trends and then we looked at practice level figures to disaggregate and look at sort of the range, the median and the 95th and 5th percentile of patients per GP across practices in England. We also used the number of patients registered at jail practice to get our total number of patients, your denominator from the nhs.But we also compared this to Office of National Statistics, Office for national statistics ONS figures of mid year population estimates between 2017 and 2023 to again compare how you know what your population is changes the number of patients per GP or gps per capita. You can calculate it both ways and.Speaker A00:03:45.590 - 00:03:57.920I think just setting that out shows us why this is actually a really complicated area.So there's lots of different ways to define a GP and how they're working, but there's also lots of different sources you can look to to count a GP as well.Speaker B00:03:58.880 - 00:04:21.140Correct. And, you know, there's, there's nuance

Oct 21, 202515 min

S3 Ep 215Talking GLP-1s: how GPs see their role in obesity management

Today, we’re speaking to Jadine Scragg, a researcher based at the University of Oxford, and Sabrina Keating about their recent paper published here in the BJGP.Title of paper: GPs’ perspectives on GLP-1RAs for obesity management: a qualitative study in EnglandAvailable at: https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2025.0065General practitioners (GPs) play a central role in managing obesity yet face significant challenges due to limited treatment options and resource constraints. GLP-1RAs are emerging as a promising treatment for obesity but access in primary care is limited. This study provides new insights into GPs’ perspectives on the integration of GLP-1RAs into primary care, highlighting concerns around resource limitations, health equity, and misuse of the medications.TranscriptThis transcript was generated using AI and has not been reviewed for accuracy. Please be aware it may contain errors or omissions.Speaker A00:00:01.200 - 00:01:00.730Hello and welcome to BJGP Interviews. I'm Nada Khan and I'm one of the associate editors of the bjgp. Thanks for taking the time today to listen to this podcast.Today we're speaking to Judine Scragg, a researcher based at the University Oxford, and Sabrina Keating, a DPHIL student who's also based at the University of Oxford within the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences.We're here to talk about their recent paper, published here in the BJJP, titled GP's Perspectives on GLP1 Receptor Agonists for Obesity Management A Qualitative Study in England. So, hi, Judine and Sabrina, it's great to meet you both for this chat.I guess the first thing to say is that this work is really topical at the moment, especially given current plans to increase the rollout of GLP1 receptor agonists into the community. But, Judine, I'll come to you first and I wonder if you could just tell us a bit more about what you wanted to do in this research and why.Speaker B00:01:01.510 - 00:02:25.330Yeah, absolutely. So, for a long time, as you've said, the GLP1s have been very topical, both in clinical groups and with patients as well.So I'm first and foremost, I'm a weight management researcher and I've done work in populations with people living with type 2 diabetes and polycystic ovary syndrome. And within those populations, one of the things they've constantly asked about is about GLP1s, when do I qualify? When do I get it around?And similarly with the gps GP groups as well, there's been a lot of questions, there's lots of media about, you know, both good and bad about GLPs and outlining different people's thought processes and are they good? Are they bad?So what we sought to do with this was to sort of more robustly work out what it is GPs actually feel about the perceived integration of the GLP1s into primary care to very kind of firmly focus on GP specifically.And this ended up coming at a really timely point, as midway through the study, the NICE guidance was brought out on outlining the plans for how tirepatide would be rolled out. So it was a really timely piece to find out exactly what they were thinking and feeling about how this may impact them and their patients.So that's really what we set out to do.Speaker A00:02:26.200 - 00:02:55.660Great.And this was a qualitative interview study of 25 GPs across England working across different roles, and they all had different experience in weight management services. But I really Just wanted to come on to what you found here.And let's start with an area that's quite a common issue right now, and I certainly don't seem to go a day without a patient asking me about whether they can get a weight loss injection. But what did gps think about navigating these patient requests when they. When they get them?Speaker C00:02:56.140 - 00:03:56.260Yeah. So at kind of the moment we were conducting interviews, that was definitely a real source of sort of frustration and difficulty.There were quite a few patients presenting, asking for GLP1s, the majority of whom were ineligible often, or would only be eligible through kind of this longer, more drawn out process of accessing specialist care, which in many of the regions just did not exist or was going to take kind of years and years. So it was not necessarily an amazing option.This kind of left the gps we spoke to in quite an uncomfortable position where they kind of had to play the role of gatekeeper, really manage those expectations and potentially kind of have that compromising sort of interaction with their patients. So certainly the gps that we spoke to had some frustrations associated with that.Speaker A00:03:56.820 - 00:04:03.620Yeah, absolutely. And I suppose it's a little bit about how to manage those requests. So did the gps talk about that at all?Speaker C00:04:04.100 - 00:04:31.440Yeah, there were some different strategies that we heard about. I would say the primary one was just around identifying other options that would be available.That was more difficult in some cases where patients had alr

Oct 14, 202517 min

S3 Ep 214Receptionists reimagined: How online services are transforming the GP front desk

Today, we’re speaking to Dr Steph Stockwell, a senior analyst based at RAND Europe.Title of paper: Evolution of the general practice receptionist role and online services: a qualitative studyAvailable at: https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2024.0677The introduction of online systems and services into general practice and the impact on general practice staff has been considered from a clinician perspective, but comparatively little is known about how these introductions have affected the receptionist role. This study highlights that the use of online services is leading to an evolution of the general practice receptionist role. The role is becoming increasingly complex as practices use multiple online systems, which impacts demand management and navigation aspects of the role. Online systems have variable consequences on workload for receptionists, which has potential implications for workflow, consistency of task completion, job satisfaction, and retention and recruitment of these key staff members.This transcript was generated using AI and has not been reviewed for accuracy. Please be aware it may contain errors or omissions.Speaker A00:00:00.320 - 00:00:53.350Hello and welcome to BJJP Interviews. I'm Nada Khan and I'm one of the Associate Editors of the bjgp. Thanks for listening to this podcast today.In today's episode, we're speaking to Dr. Steph Stockwell, a senior analyst based at RAND Europe.We're here to discuss the paper she's published here in the BJGP titled Evolution of the General Practice Receptionist Role and Online Services A Qualitative Study.So, hi, Steph, it's great to meet and talk about this work and one of the reasons I really wanted to talk about this is that I think it's timely work, given that we know there's an increasing emphasis just in general practice on triage and also the multidisciplinary team. You talk in the introduction of this paper just about the role of receptionists, which has been evolving and changing in recent years.So just talk us through that a bit.Speaker B00:00:53.720 - 00:02:09.550Yeah. So this work came about because we were doing some work for the wider de facto study, which was a.An observational, mixed methods study that involved delete reviews, some surveys, ethnographic case studies and some interviews.And it was whilst I was doing some of the ethnographic case study work that we spent a lot of time around reception staff because they were the ones who were doing most of the digital facilitation, which is the phenomena that we were. Were looking at. It was whilst doing these observations that the idea for this, this paper came to me, as, you know, often the.The first point of call for, for patients making contact with general practice and they're really crucial for helping to manage that demand and facilitating patient access to care.But during these observations, I noticed how the perception of what a receptionist did, particularly among patients and the public, was a little bit outdated and the array of technologies and platforms that they were having to manage and, and help patients use as well, was really sort of the stereotype of answering telephone calls.So, yeah, the rationale for this work sort of came about on the back of that and it made me want to look back at some of the work that we did for the De facto study and to see what sort of impact the online services had on the role of GP receptionists.Speaker A00:02:10.030 - 00:02:50.390Yeah. So you wanted to look, as you mentioned, just at the impact of online services on sort of the evolving role of receptionists.And as you mentioned, you took quite an interesting and varied approach here.So you did the ethnographic work that you mentioned, but you also did interviews with patients and staff and practices and the ethnographic work was really interesting. So you were actually sitting in eight different practices and observing what receptionists were doing.But I want to really focus on what you found here and I think the first thing to talk about is that the receptionists had a really different and varied role between those different practices and even within the practice itself. So talk us through that.Speaker B00:02:51.170 - 00:03:43.630Yeah.So speaking to a couple of receptionists who'd been in the role sort of a longer time, they were reflecting in their interviews about how the role itself, from their point of view, having been in it for such a long period of time, has changed. Previously they would do sort of fewer and more repetitive type jobs, but now it's just so much more varied.That's just one person within their role over a period of time.But then we were noticing that receptionists within one practice and between the different practices, we went into what was conceptualised as a receptionist.What the receptionist role looks like was very different and it was impacted by whether the practices had specific administrators, so people like reception clerks or IT officers, the number of different

Oct 7, 202515 min

S3 Ep 213Menopausal symptoms from hormone receptor positive breast cancer treatment

Today, we’re speaking to Dr Sophie McGrath, Consultant Medical Oncologist based at the Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust and at Kingston Hospital in London.Title of paper: Management of menopausal symptoms following treatment for hormone receptor positive breast cancerAvailable at: https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2025.0264This transcript was generated using AI and has not been reviewed for accuracy. Please be aware it may contain errors or omissions.Speaker A00:00:00.800 - 00:01:11.660Hello and welcome to BJJP Interviews. My name is Nada Khan and I'm one of the associate editors of the bjgp. Thanks for joining us today to listen to this podcast.In today's episode, we're speaking to Dr. Sophie McGrath, who is a consultant medical oncologist based at the Royal Morrison NHS Trust and at Kingston Hospital in London.We're here to talk about the recent analysis article that she and her colleagues have published here in the BJDP titled Management of Menopausal Symptoms Following Treatment for Hormone Receptor Positive Breast Cancer.And just to point out that these colleagues included not just medical oncologists, but also GPs and patients, which I think has really shaped this article and is one of the reasons why we wanted to highlight it here in the podcast. So, hi Sophie, thanks for meeting me to talk about this article, which I think touches on a really important topic in practice.But talk us through some of the initial side effects that you discuss in the introduction here. Just in terms of hormone positive breast cancer, what kind of symptoms do women experience generally as a result of endocrine therapy?Speaker B00:01:12.220 - 00:02:32.900So, yeah, thanks very much for asking. And it's a bit of a broad answer that I would give.I mean, I've focused on, or we have focused on three main symptoms within the article which relate to hot flushes or vasomotor symptoms, also to joint stiffness and pain and swelling, arthralgia, and also to vulvovaginal symptoms, otherwise known as genitourinary syndrome of menopause.But I think what we've tried to include within the article as well is a table that certainly acknowledges that there are unfortunately many other symptoms that women can get as a result of these medications, essentially mimicking menopausal side effects.And of course, you know, these might be symptoms that women having already gone through the menopause may have suffered or experienced at some point already.But actually for a population of premenopausal women, these will be symptoms that they haven't had any experience of yet and can often be quite intense and develop quite suddenly. Whereas often our post menopausal women have had some sort of lead up to this, they've had some experience.Speaker A00:02:34.710 - 00:02:44.710And you work as a medical oncologist. But just talk me through your own experience of working with women who are going through the sort of sudden menopause as you describe as well.Speaker B00:02:45.350 - 00:05:50.240So obviously the focus of the article here is on menopausal side effects in general from the treatments that we use. And we've talked a lot about using our endocrine treatments such as tamoxifen, letrozole.But actually many of our women also experience menopausal type side effect secondary to the chemotherapies we give them. So I think, you know, there's sort of two groups you often have, particularly premenopausal women who stop their periods whilst on chemotherapy.That may happen several weeks into their chemotherapy treatment and it can be quite sudden.You know, they're already dealing with the numerous side effects attributed to the chemotherapy itself, but then they're also having to tackle these hot flushes, insomnia, potentially arthralgia. Obviously the vaginal symptoms may be more medium to longer term impact.So you've got that group of women who are sort of thrust into menopausal symptoms very quickly and then you have the other group who perhaps have already gone through their menopause.So they're not necessarily getting those symptoms alongside chemotherapy, but, but then after that we are introducing letrozole, which by removing even that last little bit of oestrogen production in the system is giving them enhanced menopausal side effects yet again. So I think that's sort of psychologically a big thing for the patients to deal with as well.Whether they're sort of having all of that thrust upon them in one go or whether it's more gradual and they're almost waiting for it to occur. So I think for us, us there's a lot we've got to get through in our consultations.Obviously if it happens alongside chemotherapy, then we're seeing them regularly anyway. We've got our nurses to support them in the clinics too.But I think the challenge arises more when our ladies are moving on to their endocrine therapy and moving away from regular consultations in our clinics and having more contact again with primary care. They're wanting to get on with their lives. They're wanting to

Sep 30, 202524 min

S3 Ep 212Inside the BJGP and editorial insights: Euan Lawson on the future of publishing and how to get published

Today, we’re speaking to Euan Lawson, the Editor in Chief of the BJGP, about a number of issues around editing, the future of the journal and how you can get involved with the BJGP.Here's a link to the BJGP Research and Publishing Conference: https://bjgp.org/conferenceThis transcript was generated using AI and has not been reviewed for accuracy. Please be aware it may contain errors or omissions.Speaker A00:00:00.400 - 00:00:55.980Hello and welcome to BJJP Interviews. I'm Nada Khan and I'm one of the associate editors of the bjjp. Thanks for taking the time today to listen to this podcast.In today's episode, we're speaking to Euan Lawson, who is the editor in chief of the bjjp.We're going to have a chat about a number of issues around the future of the Journal, around editorial issues and how you can get involved with the BJJP as well. So, hi, Ewan. Yeah, nice to see you. And just wanted to really start by saying thanks for joining me here today for this podcast.But yeah, thanks for joining me here today, Ewan, just to have a general chat about things going on with BJGP and your role as editor.And yeah, just a chance to catch up about some of your thoughts about issues around academic publishing and then just have a chat generally about other things that you've been thinking about as editor. So how's your week been?Speaker B00:00:57.420 - 00:02:13.730We've already had that conversation before we got here. Now we won't go there again. As you know, it's not been perhaps my ideal week.But as I'm delighted to be here and talking a little bit about what's going on with the Journal and just give a little bit of insight into how things are going, perhaps the biggest thing that we're I've recently written about the impact factor at the Journal, and perhaps the most important thing I need to say is that we don't worry too much about the impact factor.I know we do quite well on the impact factor, but I wrote an editorial which really pointed out that we are much more interested in the real world influence of the journal rather than what is quite a narrow metric about citations. We're more interested in how it affects clinical, how the journal articles affect clinical practice, how they affect policy.And we're really pushing, trying to push in that direction.And once we get into worrying about the impact factor and there are a lot of perverse kind of incentives in academia and it can sometimes result in what's known as questionable research practices and things can just slide away from the ideal a little bit.So that's perhaps one of the things that we're trying to concentrate on most in this coming months and years is just making sure that we keep our impact all about real world rather than anything else.Speaker A00:02:14.130 - 00:02:26.230Yeah, you mentioned questionable research practices and you did talk about this in your editorial or your editor's briefing, but how do you think the Journal can tackle that head on?Speaker B00:02:27.750 - 00:04:23.309I mean, it is challenging because it's.The thing about QRP questionable research practices is that there's like they're a spectrum and they go from really very minor stuff, which is like, you know, giving you, a professor in your department authorship on a paper where they really didn't do anything, to a kind of a. The far end of the spectrum where you start to creep into outright research fraud.And most researchers, and I think particularly in the primary care field though, you know, we'd always got to be. You always. One has to be careful about making assumptions, you know, are.Have bags of integrity and do the best they can, but they're working in pressurized systems. And sometimes the QRPs are just things like that can be about the authorship or it can be about declarations of conflicts of interest.It's how we go about doing our work in terms of how we quote other papers. Or sometimes it can be a little bit about how we tweak results to try to get positive results out because they're more likely to be published.And those are perhaps the areas where as a journal we can be a little bit more helpful in that, you know, making sure we are quite happy to publish negative findings. We don't overstate results.It's very easy as a journal to take a paper and there's a, you know, you want a brief summary of it to explain it to people. But it's important that we don't overstate and overinflate results that result in inaccurate messages going out about those papers.So they're the kind of areas we can help. But let's not be under any illusions. It's a systems kind of problem.Academic departments and the culture they have and the whole system of getting grants, publishing how those then get disseminated in the media as well. So it's a big old complex beast. And I think we just try and look at the areas journals may have the.May have an impact, and we're trying to push things in the right direction.Speaker A00:04:23.789 - 00:04:40.109Fair enough. And you mentioned impact and I ju

Sep 23, 202520 min

S3 Ep 211Bridging the gap: GPs, patients, and mental health in perimenopause

Today, we’re speaking to Dr Jo Burgin, a GP and a researcher based at the University of Bristol.Title of paper: Mental health consultations during the perimenopausal age range – Are GPs and patients on the same page?: A qualitative studyAvailable at: https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2025.0069Mood changes are a recognised symptom of perimenopause, for which Hormone Replacement Therapy is considered a first line treatment. Recent studies have found mental health symptoms are overlooked in menopause care, which is mostly delivered in primary care. This study identifies some key barriers to identifying perimenopause in women presenting with mental health symptoms and suggests important changes clinicians could make to their consultations to address this.

Sep 16, 202519 min
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