Why are more GPs opting to work outside the NHS?
6 hours ago Nikki FoxEast of England health correspondent In her consulting room, Dr Yvonne Girgis-Hanna is at work as a GP, but not for the NHS.
She is one of an increasing number of family doctors opting to practise privately.
"I could not work as a full‑time NHS GP," she says.
"The days I do in the NHS, the next day I'm totally wiped out. You might have 30 face‑to‑face contacts, then extra telephone calls and paperwork. You just don't have time to even go to the toilet. "
So why are more doctors opting to work outside the NHS – and why are patients prepared to pay to see them?
Between 2024 and 2025, new registrations rose by 58%.
The category covers a wide range of specialities, from general practice to skin complaints, women's health, and aesthetics.
Both the CQC and NHS England say there is no category that isolates private GP registrations.
For context, the Royal College of GPs says 6,229 NHS GP practices were active as of September 2025.
The company she works with, Cambridge Private Doctors, says demand has grown.
Once sessions were ad‑hoc, but now it has 14 GPs working across multiple sites.
Girgis-Hanna's patients pay from £129 for a 20-minute appointment, with options of up to an hour.
Longer consultations allow for continuity, she says, similar to when she started her career and family doctors gave "cradle to grave" care. Working privately gives her more time and resources to care for patients, she says.
Demand is the central challenge in the NHS, she believes.
Some patients, she says, present 20 or 30 times a year to general practice, which has an annual budget of roughly £120 per patient.
"If you imagine £120 for somebody that might be presenting 20 times, it is very little," she says.
So what do her patients think?
On seeing a GP privately, she says: "Mentally, it's better. I don't have the anxiety of waiting. She [Girgis‑Hanna] knows me; I know her. "
In neighbouring Hertfordshire, GP Dr Karen Benson works privately from a pharmacy in Letchworth. She began volunteering during Covid and flu vaccinations and says it was "like a casualty department".
"I said to the pharmacy owner, 'You need to have a general practitioner in your place.
there are some things [pharmacists] can't deal with,'" she says. "I haven't got constant interruptions… it's a much more relaxed atmosphere. " Benson also offers appointments of up to an hour and says she has more freedom to practise lifestyle medicine, looking at underlying causes and sometimes deprescribing.
Janet Tomlin, 79, says she opted to go private because of difficulty in getting an NHS appointment.
"If you phoned, you'd be in a queue, and you could wait forever," she says.
The BMA's GP committee representative, Dr Diana Hunter, an NHS GP in Cambridgeshire, says: "I know colleagues who work in private general practice and really enjoy it.
"We've also upgraded thousands of practice phone systems and introduced online request forms, making it easier for people to contact their surgery. while keeping phone lines free for those who need urgent care. "
Health Secretary Wes Streeting said: "We're fixing the front door to the NHS.
"Many more patients with urgent needs will be able to get an appointment the day they contact their practice. " Additional reporting by Matt Precey, Jonathan Fagg and Nic Rigby Follow East of England news on X, Instagram and Facebook: BBC Beds, Herts & Bucks, BBC Cambridgeshire, BBC Essex, BBC Norfolk, BBC Northamptonshire or BBC Suffolk
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