COVID: NHS allows GPs to postpone health checks for over-75s and new patients to focus on booster jabs

NHS England has also revealed the online National Booking Service for boosters will be updated to reflect changes in eligibility "no later than 13 December".

Booster jabs will be rolled out in descending age groups. File pic
Image: Booster jabs will be rolled out in descending age groups. File pic
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GPs have been given permission to postpone health checks for over-75s and new patients to allow them to focus on the ramped up booster vaccine rollout.

In a letter released on Friday it told GPs there is a "new national mission" to ramp up the COVID booster campaign after the government promised to offer third jabs to all adults by the end of January.

It comes amid the rise of the new Omicron variant, first detected in South Africa, which is thought to be more contagious than the current Delta strain.

Checks can be deferred until the end of March next year and doctors will also be able to reduce or halt minor surgeries until then without financial penalty.

They will be paid based on the number of minor surgeries they carried out from December 2018 to March 2019, regardless of the actual number they perform in the next few months.

"Capacity released must be redeployed to vaccination," the letter says.

Who can get a coronavirus booster jab - and when you can book
Who can get a coronavirus booster jab - and when you can book

There are now 134 Omicron cases in the UK, with the first case confirmed in Wales late on Friday.

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Despite the announcement that all over-18s are now eligible for a booster, and the gap between second and third doses is reduced from six to three months, the online National Booking Service has not been updated to reflect the changes.

In its letter the NHS promised that the system would be up to date "as soon as possible and no later than 13 December".

The newly-eligible groups will be invited to have their third doses in "descending" five-year age groups, starting with the 30 to 39-year-olds.

The health service also revealed the Army and "clinical students" would also be called upon to maximise capacity in the booster rollout.

Commenting on the decision for GP surgeries, the Patients Association told The Guardian that delaying health checks for the elderly risked symptoms being missed.

But the Royal College of GPs, welcoming the acknowledgment the system is already stretched, said the "temporary" measures are "sensible".

Dr Farah Jameel, GP committee chair of the British Medical Association, told the BBC they would remove "some of the more bureaucratic and target-based requirements within practices' contracts".