In every community there is a general practitioner (GP) or a family doctor who will continue to be the backbone of medical services. They provide necessary primary care and act as a gatekeeper for other services, referral to patients as needed. Approximately 250 million GP consultations each year, about 6 million people visiting the pharmacy every day. Visiting a doctor or dentist may require advice on treatment or prevention. Most general practitioners are carrying out a project to prevent cardiac diseases and stroke, manage chronic diseases such as asthma and diabetes, and increase the immunity of children.
The requirements of the autism law include the development of services across health services and social services. In the UK, a family doctor (general practitioner) is a gatekeeper for patient care. It is therefore important to understand how GP understands autism and provides clinical and social care to ASD patients. To promote this, the British Family Doctors Association (Royal College of General Practitioners) will give priority to autism as a clinical priority in 2014, to provide clinical leadership and to provide innovative clinical programs I have appointed a clinical symptomatic champion.
The General Practitioner (GP) provides a portal for medical services for people with mental illness. They examine all of these patients and work with team members to treat most patients. Psychiatrists are watching the most serious mentally ill patients. GP can spend up to 30% on mental health problems, but in dealing with these aspects, we often feel that we need more support and training. People introduced to general psychiatric practitioners feel that they can trust them, but 40% feel prejudice and discrimination. Other doctors including psychiatrists sometimes experienced patient prejudice. Doctor's attitude towards people with mental illness may be similar to that of the general population