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The NHS has begun a private-sector pilot allowing UK-registered general practitioners to deliver video and telephone consultations while based overseas, as part of measures in its 10-year 'Fit for the Future' plan to boost clinical capacity.
The scheme run with Asterix Health currently lists eight doctors operating from countries including Australia, India and Malaysia and is reported to support seven GP practices covering about 250,000 patients.
Roles focus on triage, reviewing results and remote consultations; the firm says many clinicians are ex-UK GPs and offers training for English language tests.
Critics — including the BMA GP committee chair Dr Katie Bramall-Stainer, GP broadcaster Dr Renee Hoenderkamp and Shadow Health Secretary Stuart Andrew — warn the model risks undermining continuity of care and patient trust, noting there are UK-based GPs seeking work.
A Department of Health spokesman said the pilot is run by a private company, is not endorsed by NHS England and there are no plans for national rollout.
Government figures point to 3,000 GPs recruited in the past year and a £1.1bn boost to primary care.










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