The Doctor Association Union brought the government to the court for changing the planned role


Sunday 27 July 2025 14:56

A review chaired by Professor Gillian Leng, who is the President of the Royal Society of Medicine, said that Pas must be prohibited from seeing patients who have not been reviewed by a medical

The unity will bring the government to the court for its decision to apply the recommended changes to the role of fellow doctors (PA) in the NHS, said United Medical Professionals (UMAP).

This follows the findings by the report ordered by the government that PAS has been used as a substitute for a doctor despite having a much less training.

A review chaired by Professor Gillian Leng, who is the President of the Royal Society of Medicine, said that PAS must be prohibited from seeing patients who have not been reviewed by a medical officer to prevent the risk of “disaster” diagnosis errors.

On Sunday, UMAP had sent a letter to the Secretary of the Health and NHS England stated their intention to submit a claim of the Judicial Review, the union said.

They urged the government to reconsider what was described by the Union as a “total reshuffle” of their profession, and had accused the streets of playing in the hands of the British Medical Association (BMA) when the doctor resident made a salary of salary.

Stephen Nash, Secretary General of UMAPS said: “Leng Review found no difficult evidence that fellow doctors are not safe or ineffective.

“However, Wes Streeting has received a review of reviews to completely overhaul the role of our work, without many UMAPS consultations as a union that is recognized for PAS and AAS.

“It’s not fair and in no rational.

“We are very worried about how this change will affect patient access to treatment, especially during the ongoing BMA strike.”

Five -day strikes by doctors in the United Kingdom are ongoing, with members of the BMA Manning picket route throughout the country.

The government has until August 1 to show whether to reconsider its decision or not, said the union.

More than 3,500 PAS and 100 AA work at NHS and there is a previous call for expansion in their numbers.

But the lack of general support for the two roles of the medical profession, plus the high level of death of patients is diagnosed by PAS, causing reviews.

In his report, Leng concluded that “there is no convincing reason to eliminate the role of AA or PA” but also there are no cases “to continue with unchanged roles”.

He said more details were needed where patients could be seen by PAS and national clinical protocols would now be developed in this area.

“Before this change, when it made around 20 million promises to meet a year,” added Mr. Nash.

“Now, every day we hear from the employer who struggles to manage the patient’s burden because PA and AA are no longer allowed to do the work that is trained for us to do.

“But the Secretary of the Health does not seem to do an assessment of how Leng’s recommendations will affect the NHS deposits.

“It’s hard to see the decision of streeting as anything other than efforts to relieve increasingly radical BMA, which has spent the last few years by conducting a vengeful campaign and is very coordinated with medical partners.

“Now he has played right in the hands of BMA, preventing medical professionals who meet the requirements of caring for patients correctly so that their attacks bite harder.”

Sneha Naiwal, a partner in Shakespeare Martineau, who led the case for UMAP, said: “This case is not about rejecting changes, but about ensuring that changes are valid, based on evidence, and respect for professionals who have long served on the forefront of patient care.

“Doctors’ partners deserve a meaningful voice in shaping their future, not ruled out by decisions taken without full and open involvement.

“The prosecutors are worried that the current approach can damage the important parts of clinical labor and increase pressure on NHS services, harm patients and staff.”

Six patient deaths related to contact with PAS have been recorded by coronary in the UK.

One high profile death involved Emily Chesterton, 30, who died of pulmonary embolism.

He was wrongly diagnosed by PA on two occasions and said that he had anxiety.

A spokesman for the Ministry of Health and Social Care said: “The government launched this review to ensure patients get the highest quality treatment, have clarity about who cared for them, and has trust in the health system.

“Gillian Leng is one of the most experienced health care leaders in the UK and has submitted a comprehensive report.

“The Secretary of the Health has agreed to implement the recommendations of their reports in full, prioritize safety and convince patients that, when they seek medical advice for various symptoms, they will be seen and diagnosed by doctors who meet the requirements.”

By Mathilde Granddjean, Pa





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Originally posted 2025-07-27 17:06:30.

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