The BMA has said it will support any GP practice that continues to ask patients and staff to wear face masks.
NHS England updated its guidance earlier this month to say that patients who enter GP practices in England are no longer required to wear a face mask unless they have respiratory symptoms.
But the BMA said that practices must be ‘able to exercise discretion’ to protect patients and staff.
Its latest GP bulletin said: ‘People who come to GP practices are more likely to be ill or clinically vulnerable, so it’s vital that practices are able to exercise discretion to protect patients and staff.
Especially in the context of rising abuse towards practice staff, people must be assured that if practices are asking them to continue wearing masks this is for the safety of everyone in the building.’
It added: ‘The BMA will support practices and doctors who continue to ask patients and staff to wear face masks where they feel this is necessary.’
The BMA also said local risk assessments for staff coming into contact with Covid are ‘particularly important now that the requirement for social distancing and mask wearing is no longer obligatory’.
It added: ‘It is still the employer’s responsibility to ensure safe working for staff, and thus a risk assessment should still be carried out and appropriate mitigations.’
The BMA has revised its guidance on Covid risk assessments for GP practices, which said that practices ‘might be vulnerable if their risk assessment does not include Covid-19 whilst prevalence remains significant’ due to these legal obligations.
It set out various examples of risk scenarios, including that GPs conducting face-to-face consultations in a ‘small poorly ventilated room’ and receptionists working with no partition and/or ‘inadequate or uncertain’ ventilation remain at ‘high risk’.
Suggested control measures included:
However, the guidance added that practices ‘will need to review those mitigations that potentially reduce the standard of care, such as limiting face-to-face consultations, once the disease prevalence decreases’.
As previously published in our sister title, Pulse
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