Book Description
With allergies affecting about 30% of the adult population, and 40% of children, the need for a skilled primary care service is essential. The Committee, though, found serious problems in provision of such services. To combat this, the Committee recommends; setting up a network of primary care allergy providers; improved incentives for GPs to treat allergies; a system for better training in understanding and dealing with allergies; developing a framework that introduces allergies into the GPs Special Interest programme, so giving their treatment higher priority. Besides the deficiencies highlighted in the primary care services, the Committee also recommends improvements to secondary and tertiary care, and that at least one specialist allergy centre should be located in each of the former NHS regions, serving populations of between 5-7 million, and with a minimum of four allergy consultants. The Committee thinks that in the longer term, allergies should be the focus of a full specialist consultant workforce, with every major teaching hospital having a consultant-led service