Statutory Instrument 1997 No. 943 (S.85)

      The National Health Service (General Medical Services) (Scotland) Amendment Regulations 1997


      © Crown Copyright 1997

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STATUTORY INSTRUMENTS

1997 No. 943 (S.85)

NATIONAL HEALTH SERVICE, SCOTLAND

The National Health Service (General Medical Services) (Scotland) Amendment Regulations 1997

  Made 16th March 1997 
  Laid before Parliament 19th March 1997 
  Coming into force 1st April 1997 

The Secretary of State, in exercise of the powers conferred on him by sections 2(5), 19, 105(7) and 108(1) of the National Health Service (Scotland) Act 1978[1] and of all other powers enabling him in that behalf, hereby makes the following Regulations:

Citation, commencement and interpretation
     1 .  - (1) These Regulations may be cited as the National Health Service (General Medical Services) (Scotland) Amendment Regulations 1997 and shall come into force on 1st April 1997.

    (2) In these Regulations "the principal Regulations" means the National Health Service (General Medical Services) (Scotland) Regulations 1995[
2].

Amendment of regulation 2 of the principal Regulations
     2 . In regulation 2(1) of the principal Regulations (interpretation) for the definition of "maternity medical services" there shall be substituted-

      " "maternity medical services" shall be construed in accordance with regulation 31 and Schedule 4A;".

Amendment of regulation 6 of the principal Regulations
    
3 . In regulation 6 of the principal Regulations (local directory of family doctors) for paragraph (1)(h) substitute-

Amendment of regulation 31 of the principal Regulations
    
4 . For regulation 31 of the principal Regulations (obtaining maternity medical services) substitute-

Amendment of Schedule 1 to the principal Regulations
    
5 .  - (1) Schedule 1 to the principal Regulations (terms of service for doctors) is amended as follows.

    (2) In paragraph 1 the definition of "deputising service" is omitted.

    (3) After paragraph 9 there are inserted the following two new paragraphs:-

    (4) In paragraph 11 sub-paragraphs (4), (5) and (7) shall be omitted.

    (5) In paragraph 18(5) for "deputising service" in both places where the expression occurs, substitute "organisation of the type mentioned in paragraph 19 with which he has entered an arrangement in accordance with that paragraph".

    (6) For paragraphs 19 and 20 substitute the following new paragraphs-

    (7) In paragraph 35 (annual reports), in paragraph (c) of sub-paragraph (2) the words "health promotion or" are omitted.

Insertion of Schedule 4A to the principal Regulations
     6 . After Schedule 4 to the principal Regulations, there shall be inserted Schedule 4A in the Schedule to these Regulations.

Amendment of Schedule 7 to the principal Regulations
    
7 . In Schedule 7 to the principal Regulations (information to be provided in annual reports) in paragraph (4)-

James Douglas-Hamilton
Minister of State, Scottish Office

St Andrew's House, Edinburgh
16th March 1997


SCHEDULE
Regulation 6


SCHEDULE TO BE ADDED TO THE PRINCIPAL REGULATIONS{lq}




"SCHEDULE 4A
Regulation 31


MATERNITY MEDICAL SERVICES


     1. A doctor with whom a woman has made an arrangement under regulation 31(2) for the provision of maternity medical services during the ante-natal period shall take all reasonable steps to provide full ante-natal care, supervision and examination including full medical and obstetric examination of the woman as soon as possible after the arrangement is made and such further examination as the condition of the woman requires until-

    (a) where the pregnancy is terminated by miscarriage, the woman has received all necessary personal medical services in connection with the miscarriage; or

    (b) where the woman goes into labour, the date of the onset of that labour.

     2. A doctor with whom a woman has made an arrangement under regulation 31(2) for the provision of maternity medical services during labour shall take all reasonable steps to secure that she receives all necessary personal medical services during that labour.

     3. A doctor with whom a woman has made an arrangement under regulation 31(2) for the provision of maternity medical services during the post-natal period shall-

    (a) take all reasonable steps to secure that the woman receives all necessary personal medical services related to the recent pregnancy or labour during the post-natal period; and

    (b) where the pregnancy has resulted in the birth of a live baby, render all necessary personal medical services to that baby during the period of 14 days following its birth, unless, during that period, another doctor has accepted the baby for inclusion in his list pursuant to an application made on the baby's behalf under regulation 19(1).

     4. A doctor with whom a woman has made an arrangement under regulation 31(2) for the provision of a post-natal examination shall, not less than 6 weeks nor more than 12 weeks after the conclusion of the pregnancy-

    (a) undertake a full post-natal examination of the woman; and

    (b) take all reasonable steps to ensure that the woman is informed of the need for any further treatment she may require.

     5. The doctor providing the maternity medical services shall, if he is not the doctor on whose list the name of the woman is included-

    (a) comply with any request by the doctor on whose list the name of the woman is included to examine or give other assistance to the woman and her child if and so far as the practitioner providing the services considers it necessary and appropriate that he should do so;

    (b) issue, in accordance with the provisions of paragraph 13(7) of the terms of service, to the woman or her personal representative certificates of pregnancy, expected confinement and confinement, being certificates reasonably required by her.

     6. Where the doctor is aware that an arrangement under regulation 31(2) is about to be terminated under regulation 31(5) he shall take all reasonable steps to ensure that the woman is informed of the manner in which she may make a further such arrangement with another doctor.

     7. The doctor shall be relieved of his obligations under paragraph 1, 2, 3 or 4, as the case may be-

    (a) during any period when the woman is outside the doctor's practice area and is not present at any other place where, pursuant to paragraph 13 of the terms of service, the doctor is obliged to visit and treat her;

    (b) where it is proposed that the woman's labour should take place in a hospital, to the extent that responsibility for her care has been taken over by the hospital; and

    (c) where the woman has been admitted to a hospital as an in-patient, to the extent that her care has been taken over by the hospital.

     8. Nothing in the foregoing shall affect the responsibility of the doctor on whose list the name of the woman receiving maternity medical services is included for the provision of treatment necessary for her general health.".



EXPLANATORY NOTE

(This note is not part of the Regulations)


These Regulations further amend the National Health Service (General Medical Services) (Scotland) Regulations 1995 ("the principal Regulations") which regulate the terms on which general medical services are provided under the National Health Service (Scotland) Act 1978.

Regulations 4, 5 and 6 introduce new arrangements for maternity medical services and the obligations of a doctor who has undertaken to provide such services. Maternity medical services are defined to comprise four component parts and a doctor who undertakes to provide maternity medical services may undertake to do so in respect of any or all of those parts.

Regulation 5 also amends the doctors' terms of service in relation to a doctor's obligations where he uses the services of an organisation providing deputy doctors. While a doctor has to notify the Health Board of any arrangements he may make with such an organisation, he no longer has to obtain the prior consent of the Health Board. The Regulations require a doctor himself to ensure that the services provided by an organisation providing deputy doctors are adequate and appropriate and that its doctors are suitably qualified and trained and have not been either disqualified or suspended from practice by the NHS Tribunal. There is provision enabling the Health Board to ask a doctor for evidence that he is complying with this obligation, to alert the doctor to any concerns it may have and, if need be, to require the doctor to bring his arrangement with an organisation providing deputy doctors to an end.

Regulation 7 removes information about a doctor's health promotion activities from the list of information which doctors are required to include in their annual reports to Health Boards.

Regulations 2 and 3 contain drafting amendments consequential on the subsequent regulations.


Notes:

[1] 1978 c.29; section 2(5) was amended by the National Health Service and Community Care Act 1990 (c.19) (the 1990 Act), Schedule 9, paragraph 19(1); section 19 was amended by the Health Services Act 1980 (c.53) (the 1980 Act), section 7, by the Health and Social Services and Social Security Adjudications Act 1983 (c.41) (the 1983 Act), Schedule 7, paragraph 2, by the Medical Act 1983 (c.54), Schedule 5, paragraph 17(a) and by the 1990 Act, section 37 and is to be read with the Health and Medicines Act 1988 (c.49), section 17; section 105(7) was amended by the 1980 Act, Schedule 6, paragraph 5 and Schedule 7 and by the 1983 Act, Schedule 9, paragraph 24; see section 108(1) for the definitions of prescribed and regulations. back

[2] S.I. 1995/416 amended by S.I. 1995/3199, 1996/842 and 1504. back

[3] S.I. 1994/3130. back

[4] S.I. 1994/3130, amended by S.I. 1995/414. back



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