The BMA is urgently calling on NHS England to introduce a mandatory scope of practice for physician and anaesthesia associates (PAs and AAs), following the publication of a systematic review which concludes there is a lack of evidence these roles are safe.
In November 2023, the BMA called for a national pause in the recruitment and expansion of PAs and AAs following evidence that they are working considerably beyond their competencies, taking on tasks that are usually undertaken by doctors with a decade or more of education and training.
Professor Sir Stephen Powis and Dr Navina Evans, NHS England’s National Medical Director and Chief Workforce Officer respectively, wrote an open letter at the time claiming that “the evidence tells us MAPs are safe, increase the breadth of skill, capacity and flexibility of teams, positively contribute to patient experience and flow, and reduce workload pressure on other clinicians.” Despite the BMA requesting the evidence for this claim at the time, none was provided.
In the BMA’s letter, sent yesterday (11 March 2025), chair of BMA council Prof Phil Banfield reminds them of this claim in light of the BMJ’s rapid review, which concluded that NHSE’s “conflating absence of evidence of safety incidents in a small number of research studies with absence of safety concerns… is an error of logic that is likely to cost lives.”
Banfield goes on to say:
“By maintaining a postcode lottery in which different hospitals can decide what physician and anaesthesia associates can and can’t do in the absence of any agreed scope of practice, I fear that the NHS has created a patient safety scandal… It is wholly unacceptable for NHS England to continue its current course of inaction relying on evidence that cannot be provided and which this systematic review has shown does not exist.”
Disclaimer: The accuracy and information of news stories published on this website is accurate on the date of publishing. We endeavour to update stories if information change. You can contact us with change and update requests. Where possible, we will link to sources. Content on this website is for guidance purposes only. We cannot accept any responsibility or liability whatsoever for any action taken, or not taken. You should seek the appropriate legal advice having regard to your own particular circumstances.

Restoration Courses
Courses suitable for any health and social care practitioner who is considering making an application for restoration back onto the register.

Insight & Remediation
Courses that are suitable for any healthcare practitioner who is facing an investigation or hearing at work or before their regulatory body.

Probity, Ethics & Professionalism
Courses designed for those facing a complaint involving in part or in whole honesty, integrity and /or professionalism.
Recent Comments