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He won GPs their big bucks

Dr Laurence Buckman was attacked for securing higher pay packets for doctors. Time to dispel a few myths, he tells Michael Freedland

June 11, 2009 14:47
‘There happen to be fewer dead people as a result of the new contract'

ByMichael Freedland, Michael Freedland

4 min read

He is the medical man with 40,000 people who go to him when they are in trouble. He is the GP who has cases referred to him. He is, above all, the doctor you hear more on radio or television than any other or read about in the newspapers.

Laurence Buckman is chairman of the British Medical Association’s General Practitioners’ Committee — the body charged with looking after the interests of the country’s 40,000 GPs. From Tuesday to Thursday, he is at the BMA in London’s Tavistock Square. The other two days of the working week, he is at his Golders Green surgery, dealing with patients, many of whom are Jewish, and to whom he believes he owes his time and his loyalty. “I couldn’t do this job if I wasn’t a doctor first,” he says.

He is regarded as a tough negotiator at the Department of Health. It was no coincidence that he was once dubbed “Red Robbo in a white coat”, a description he did not enjoy any more than when the editor of The Lancet said his behaviour was “shameful” and that he was guilty of “insulting cynicism about politicians and their constituents”. To which he responds: “If you put your head above the parapet, you must expect to be shot at.”

He dismisses suggestions that doctors earn too much money — the average GP salary is just over £79,000 — and do not work hard enough. “Last year’s story was that fat cat doctors were helping themselves to the money at the expense of the sick. That’s an outrageous slur. It was designed to undermine the GP contract with the government, which I am proud to negotiate.