NASGP

National Association of Sessional GPs

One in four general practitioners - fully qualified doctors specialising in family medicine - in the UK work as freelance locum GPs. We're the most professionally isolated of all workers in the National Health Service NHS, and the NASGP exists to support both locum GPs and salaried GPs to improve patient care and make their work more fulfilling and enjoyable.

  1. 1D AGO

    LinkedIn tips for GPs

    Are you a sessional GP who needs to stay visible and connected between bookings? This conversation with social media expert Debbie Ford gives you 10 practical, low-effort tips to transform your LinkedIn profile into your professional shop window. View on YouTube Join NASGP's community to download Debbie's slides – subscribe on nasgp.org.uk for the link. Learn –How to optimise your profile for better discovery on Google search and AI tools. –The difference between following and connecting to build your professional network with other GPs. –How to use the scheduling tool to batch content about your GP work and career. –Simple strategies to interact with key organisations like NASGP, your local ICB, and fellow NASGP members to amplify your voice. –Why the 'one post, one message' rule helps GPs write effectively. Practices think carefully about who they bring in as a locum. Your network and online presence play a part in that. In this video Debbie shares ten practical tips to help you strengthen your profile, connect with the right people, and make this platform work for you. If you’d like more tailored support, Debbie offers a one-hour ‘Super Sixty’ session for NASGP members (£150), focused on your profile, positioning, and next steps. Explore what’s included: https://thechichestersocial.com/linkedin-power-hour Book your session: https://cal.com/debbie-ford-the-chichester-social/super-sixty-for-nasgp-members 00:00 Intro 01:18 Why LinkedIn for GPs? 12:44 Always repost! 16:18 One post, one message 21:44 How often to post 33:13 LinkedIn for GPs

    48 min
  2. MAR 6

    Identifying your risk: how to recognise the burnout cliff and build a wellbeing plan

    As a GP, you are at high risk of burnout, which the World Health Organisation defines as a syndrome from chronic, unmanaged workplace stress—it is not a personal failure. In this essential webinar, Dr Helen Garr, Medical Director at NHS Practitioner Health, shares practical, evidence-based tools to recognise the signs before you reach the 'burnout cliff' and find support within your practice and the wider sessional workforce community. YouTube of webinar https://youtu.be/Xg8aO2JjJLs What you will learn Why burnout is a system problem, not a character flaw in the sessional GP workforce.How to use energy accounting (the 'spoon theory') to protect your capacity and maintain continuity.The crucial steps to build psychological safety within your team by 'reaching in' to colleagues.The common signs you are near the 'burnout cliff' and what 'bad medicine' coping strategies look like.How to create a personal wellbeing plan (WRAP plan) and identify your vital support network (Head, Shoulders, Knees, Toes crew).Topic order Burnout: It's a systemic issue, not a flaw (Boiling frog analogy).The burnout cliff: recognising common signs and compassion fatigue.The temperature continuum: checking in on your psychological well-being.Developing a Wellbeing/Resilience Action Plan (WRAP plan).Psychological safety and secondary stressors (the psychological backpack).Building your support network (Head, Shoulders, Knees, Toes crew).Energy accounting: the 'spoon theory'.NHS Practitioner Health: confidential mental health and addiction treatment. Resources NHS Practitioner Health: https://www.practitionerhealth.nhs.uk/Dr Richard Duggins' book: Burnout Free Working https://uk.jkp.com/products/burnoutfree-working Wellbeing & Coping Website: wellbeingandcoping.netMind's Wellbeing at Work Plan: https://www.mind.org.uk/workplace/my-mental-health-at-work/wellness-action-plans/ Balint Groups (for peer support): https://balintsociety.org.uk/balint-groups-and-balint-method

    56 min

About

One in four general practitioners - fully qualified doctors specialising in family medicine - in the UK work as freelance locum GPs. We're the most professionally isolated of all workers in the National Health Service NHS, and the NASGP exists to support both locum GPs and salaried GPs to improve patient care and make their work more fulfilling and enjoyable.

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