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Physician associate law may confuse patients, says BMA


The House of Lords is being urged to throw out plans for non-doctor associate roles to be licensed by the same body as doctors.

Under a planned new law, physician associates (PAs) will be regulated by the General Medical Council (GMC).

The British Medical Association (BMA) believes this could lead to patients confusing the different roles, which it says could have "tragic consequences".

There are about 3,200 PAs working in GP surgeries and hospitals in England, with 10,000 more planned in the next decade or so.

They were introduced to help doctors with their work - examining and diagnosing patients and discussing treatments with them - although PAs are currently unregulated.

Unlike doctors, they do not have to hold a medical degree, but they usually have a degree in a life science and have to undertake a two-year training course.

The BMA, the union representing doctors in the UK, believes that regulation by the GMC could lead to a "blurring of the lines" between PAs and doctors.

In an open letter to the House of Lords ahead of a debate on Monday, the BMA's chairman Prof Phil Banfield said: "PAs are not doctors. They do not hold a medical degree and are not medically trained, despite misleading statements made by some.

"We know that patients are already confused about telling the difference between PAs and doctors, and this legislation will make this problem worse.

"Keeping the GMC as the regulator exclusively of doctors would mean we retain the clear distinction between doctors and PAs."

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Source: BBC News, 25 February 2024

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