The Isle of Wight is set to get more clinicians after the end of a successful trial.

For the past year, physician associates have been working under the direct supervision of practice GPs in pilot schemes at Newport Health Centre and Ventnor Medical Centre.

Physician associates are medically trained general healthcare practitioners, able to take medical histories, perform examinations, analyse test results and diagnose illnesses.

The support they offer gives patients faster access to professional medical care and frees up GPs to focus on patients who have a clinical need to see them.

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Following the successful year at Newport Health Centre, Katie Stebbins, along with Ventnor Medical Centre colleague Romeo Varela, is leading the drive to recruit more physician associates to the Island. 

An American from Maine, she is using her story to help encourage health professionals to pursue a career here.

She has recently returned from a recruitment event at the University of Portsmouth where she spoke to second year associates about her experiences at Newport.

Katie manages anything from same-day medical urgencies within the health centre to acute or chronic medical problems at Carisbrooke and Dower House in Pyle Street, Newport.

Always under the supervision of a GP, her work is evenly split between telephone and face to face appointments while she also undertakes some home visits.

Katie came to the Island from the States where she worked in a similar role, albeit in the hospital setting of the 800-bed Maine Medical Centre.

Her partner Scott Jones is an Islander and she is already loving life here both inside and outside of work and hopes her positive experience could encourage other health professionals to choose the Island as a place to work and live.

She said: “The health system here is really open to new roles. And at Newport Health Centre that enables us to create a truly multi-dimensional team with a wide scope of expertise and specialities and that can only be good for patient care.

“It puts us at the cutting edge of how primary care is moving forward in this country and I am really proud and excited to be part of that.

"Our centre is the second largest on the Island in terms of patient numbers and that gives us a wide variety of patients and medical issues to deal with.”

The additional role is part of a general expansion of primary care practice teams, both here on the Island and nationally, to improve access to services and help manage the increasing demand for healthcare.  

Dr Michele Legg, Island GP and clinical director at Hampshire and Isle of Wight Integrated Care Board, said: “My colleagues at GP practices are now also supported by talented teams of health professionals, from physios and mental health practitioners to clinical pharmacists and advanced nurse practitioners.

"They can often see patients sooner and have specialist expertise which can achieve better outcomes. 

“We also have hard-working non-clinical staff who are the backbone of our surgeries, arranging appointments and dealing with thousands of patient calls and enquiries every day.”