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MAGAZINE EDITION Chris Johnstone Intro.100 Words Hamish MacLaren's Pilchard In Need of TLC General Practice in 2025 Blindness EIFF 2006 The Truth About Donaldson On Being a Man A Letter By Jove A Fairy Story The BJGP 13 Years from now CONTRIBUTORS Chris JohnstoneMany Contributors Hamish McLaren Una Macleod John Gillies Josie Inwood hoolet Blair Smith John AJ Macleod Alex Thain About The Contributors RCGP Bookstore BACK ISSUES hoolet 51-Spring 2007hoolet 50-Winter 2006 hoolet 49-Summer 2006 hoolet 48-Spring 2006 hoolet 47-Winter 2005 hoolet 46-Autumn 2005 hool8 45-Summer 2005 hoolet 44-Spring 2005 hoolet 43-Winter 2004 hoolet 42-Autumn 2004 hoolet 41-Summer 2004 hoolet 40-Spring 2004 hoolet 39-Winter 2003 hoolet 38-Autumn 2003 hoolet 37-Summer 2003 hoolet 36-Spring 2003 hoolet 35-Winter 2002 hoolet 34-Autumn 2002 hoolet 33-Spring 2002 hoolet 32-Winter 2001 hoolet 31-Autumn 2001 hoolet 30-Summer 2001 hoolet 29-Spring 2001 hoolet 28-Winter 2000 hoolet 27-Autumn 2000 hoolet 26-Summer 2000 hoolet 25-Spring 2000 hoolet 24-Winter 1999 CONTACTS contact detailsWEB LINKS COURSES |
![]() NOW WE ARE 50So here it is, Merry Christmas, hoolet is 50 issues old. Our golden anniversary and we do not look look a day over 45. When we first started Rocket, it was 1990 and my eldest was just a babe in arms. Thirteen years ago the first hoolet soiled your doormats and now my eldest is doing the covers and treats me like a baby. 1993 seems so long ago, a different country. John Major was clinging to power with more enemies in his own cabinet than across the floor of the house and Tony Blair was still cherubic and full of infectious hope. Limited devolution was still a pipe dream and the concept of a Scottish Parliament, let alone a spectacular one, too ephemeral to even consider. But time passes, with increasing speed, and look where we are. Tony's burnish is more than tarnished and we are enjoying the guilty pleasures of making our own mistakes. Our parliament is spectacular, hang the cost, and we have a fair system of representation. We have had a joint government which has led the way in social change and we have the fairest socialist policies in the kingdom. We run our own health service and we are looking to separate further. Furthermore the English are happy to let us go, but Westminster cannot let go . We also have another new contract, less than three years old and already those with short memories are saying they would not vote for it again. You may feel unhappy with the contract, but it has done a lot of good. It has focussed a lot of time on good evidence-based medicine and should prevent or delay hundreds of thousands of strokes, M.I.s, renal transplants, heart failures and deaths. It has transformed my working life and family life and I am now earning a more decent wage for the considerable effort I put in. The contract is not perfect but with time it could be allowed to be even better. Our current problem is not with the contract however but with the government. They are reneging on the deal they shook on. Once we had signed the new contract we could not go back and they can now concentrate on writing the contract they would have liked us to sign.They give us a pay cut, more work for less money, poor pension deal and we cannot say a word as they publicly berate us for being greedy and caring more about money than patients. I supported the contract when it first came out, but I did say that if you wanted to sell off practices to private companies, you first had to make practices commercially attractive and that is exactly what the new contract did. In no time at all the English health service began doing just that, 4% of English practices are already run by private companies. Our lovely NHS in Scotland has until recently resisted GordonŐs pressure to follow the English example. The first Independent Sector Treatment Centre in Scotland is a signed and sealed deal at Stracathro, just as the London parliament gives ISTCs a big thumbs down. More frighteningly the first Scottish practice has put put up for public tender and Serco is one of the bidders for it. I do not remember voting for privatising the NHS when we elected our first Scottish parliament since 1707. So the last thirteen years and have been times of increasing change and excitement. We have gone from a golden age for general practice to a time when we seem to be achieving more than ever before, but appear beleaguered on every side. Maybe it has always been so, I do remember moaning about everything back then, but I donŐt remember worrying so much about the future of general practice. Our lot was good and it seemed nothing could stop general practice continuing forever in a golden glow. But the next thirteen years do look quite so safe and cosy. Innovations to undermine, sideline and destabilise general practice are on all sides. We have private companies knocking at our door, nurses are becoming more independent and claiming that they can do most of our job, physician assistants are been flown in to do all that we can for half the price and pharmacists now have lists, which once belonged to us. And the government does not like us. We have one main support that none of the others do and that is our patients. Working for them and with them over the years has built a bond that cannot be easily broken. So I look forward to another thirteen years doing what I enjoy best; treating patients, sharing their ups and downs and helping them when they need us most. And I look forward to them making my job the best in the world. I would like to thank all the people over the past thirteen years who have helped to make hoolet what it is, there are too many to thank individually, but they include Alec Logan, Mac Da Souza, Niall Cameron, Louise Hallam, Rob Hendry, Mairi Scott, Ruth Wallace and many more. All our contributors deserve a special mention and our thoughts go to Ali Bodie, who I hope will write for us again next issue. Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to all our readers.
Other hoolet online articles by Chris Johnstone can be found at:
Other hoolet reviews by Chris Johnstone:
hoolet is the magazine of RCGP Scotland. It is supported intellectually, financially and emotionally by RCGP Scotland. |
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