But in saying that, GPs can stop taking on new pts as well reduce the number of pts they choose to see in a day and also cut back on the number of days they work. A few years back the medical centre my wife worked at had about 6 GPs, none worked full-time, most didn't work 5 days a week and the dr that did work 5 days only worked 830-12 noon.
I found
this article:
A GP working a three-day week in clinic will on average work 40 hours, with reams of paperwork to complete when they're not seeing patients.
A quarter of GPs are working 50 hours a week or more.
To put this into context, a pilot is restricted to flying 32 hours over seven days, because doing more would be considered unsafe.
If you have ever worked in an analytical profession (I used to work in software programming), it's known that the brain usually solves problems better during relaxed time off (like when you are taking a tea break for example, or going out for a lunchtime walk), than when your are intensely focusing on the problem.
You can have what appears to be an insurmountable problem, which you cannot solve for hours or days, only for the answer to magically pop into your head during some down time, or after a good night's sleep.
It's the intuitive unconscious mind which solves these problems while you are relaxing. One theory is that the brain harnesses the power of quantum computing to perform this magic. One physicist said that they get all their great ideas while relaxing in the bath!
But this unconscious mind does not seem work well when you are intensely keyed up and under stress. At times you need to be keyed up and focused, but you also need regular down-time relaxation breaks, which allows the mind to solve the most complex problems by making use of natural unconscious intuition.
There are whole books on the subject of how our society is too keyed up and focused, and does not devote enough periods for downtime relaxed intuitive thinking, where the problems are solved while you sit and seemingly do nothing!
My concern is that with the UK GP average of 7.5 minutes to see each patient, a doctor has to be keyed up all day long, and does not have sufficient down-time relaxation to be able to solve problems properly. Pushing doctors to do more will only worsen this situation.