Insurance

Safeguarding a GP Practice: A Practical Guide to Essential Insurance Cover

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Running a GP surgery isn’t just about delivering excellent patient care (although that’s the heart of it). It’s also about protecting the people, premises, reputation, and financial stability of the practice. One unexpected event—whether that’s a long-term illness, a clinical claim, or a cyber attack—can seriously disrupt operations.

Below is a fresh look at the key types of insurance medical practices should consider, including medical indemnity insurance, locum insurance, absence insurance, and staff sickness insurance, along with other core protections that support a resilient primary care business.


Medical Indemnity Insurance: Protecting Against Clinical Claims

Medical indemnity insurance is designed to protect clinicians—and sometimes the practice itself—against allegations of clinical negligence.

What it typically covers

  • Claims arising from misdiagnosis or delayed diagnosis
  • Treatment or prescribing errors
  • Failure to refer or follow up appropriately
  • Alleged harm caused by clinical decisions
  • Legal defence costs associated with investigations or court proceedings

This cover may apply differently depending on whether services are NHS, private, or mixed. It’s also important to clarify whether individual clinicians hold their own arrangements or whether the practice carries organisational cover.

Why it’s essential

Clinical claims can be high value and complex. Even where a claim is ultimately unsuccessful, legal costs and management time can be substantial. Proper indemnity arrangements provide financial protection and access to specialist legal defence—both of which are critical in today’s healthcare environment.


Locum Insurance: Managing the Cost of Unexpected GP Absence

When a GP or key clinician is suddenly unable to work, the practice must often bring in locum support quickly. Locum insurance helps manage the financial impact of that decision.

What it covers

  • Reimbursement toward the cost of hiring a locum
  • A defined daily or weekly benefit
  • Cover triggered by illness or injury (subject to policy terms)
  • A maximum benefit period per claim

Most policies include a waiting period before payments begin.

Why it’s essential

Without this protection, practices may face:

  • Significant unplanned locum bills
  • Pressure on remaining clinicians
  • Increased patient waiting times
  • Disruption to contracted service delivery

Locum insurance helps maintain continuity of care while reducing financial strain during unexpected absences.


Absence Insurance: Safeguarding Key Individuals

Absence insurance (sometimes structured as key person cover) focuses on the financial risk created when a key individual cannot work.

What it covers

  • Replacement staffing costs
  • Financial support for overheads during prolonged absence
  • Defined incapacity due to illness or injury

This type of cover can apply not only to GP partners, but also to senior operational staff such as practice managers.

Why it’s essential

The absence of a practice manager or senior partner can affect:

  • Payroll and HR processes
  • Regulatory compliance
  • Financial management
  • Strategic decision-making

Absence insurance experts MIC (Medical Insurance Consultants) say that this kind of policy ensures the practice can continue operating smoothly without destabilising cash flow.


Staff Sickness Insurance: Controlling Payroll Risk

Staff sickness insurance (often structured as group income protection) helps practices manage the cost of paying employees who are off work long-term due to illness or injury.

What it covers

  • A percentage of an employee’s salary after a defined waiting period
  • Payment for a fixed duration (for example, 2–5 years, depending on the policy)
  • Support services such as rehabilitation and return-to-work assistance

It can be arranged for all staff or specific groups within the practice.

Why it’s essential

Sickness absence creates a double financial burden:

  1. Paying sick leave
  2. Paying for temporary cover or overtime

This insurance stabilises costs and allows practices to offer competitive sick pay arrangements without exposing themselves to prolonged financial risk.


Employers’ Liability Insurance: A Legal Requirement

Employers’ liability insurance is generally compulsory for organisations that employ staff.

What it covers

  • Claims by employees who suffer workplace injury or illness
  • Legal defence costs
  • Compensation awards

In a GP setting, this might include manual handling injuries, stress-related claims, or accidents within the premises.

Why it’s essential

Beyond legal compliance, it protects the practice from potentially significant compensation costs and litigation expenses.


Public Liability Insurance: Protecting Against Third-Party Claims

Medical practices have a constant flow of patients, visitors, and contractors. Public liability insurance covers non-clinical injury or property damage claims from these third parties.

What it covers

  • Slips and trips in waiting rooms
  • Accidental property damage
  • Injury claims arising from non-medical incidents

Why it’s essential

A single incident—such as a fall on wet flooring—can result in a costly claim. Public liability cover protects against those everyday but unpredictable risks.


Premises and Contents Insurance: Securing Physical Assets

If the practice owns or is responsible for its building, buildings insurance is critical. Even tenants often need contents and fit-out cover.

What it covers

  • Damage from fire, flood, storm, or vandalism
  • Theft of equipment
  • Accidental damage to medical devices and IT equipment

Why it’s essential

Replacing specialist equipment, IT systems, and furniture can be expensive and time-consuming. Adequate cover ensures rapid recovery after damage.


Business Interruption Insurance: Maintaining Income During Disruption

Business interruption insurance complements premises cover by protecting the practice’s income.

What it covers

  • Loss of revenue following insured property damage
  • Increased costs of working (such as temporary premises)
  • Financial protection during the recovery period

Why it’s essential

If the practice cannot operate normally due to fire, flood, or other insured events, income may drop sharply. Business interruption cover helps maintain financial stability while operations are restored.


Cyber Insurance: Addressing Digital Risks

Modern GP surgeries rely heavily on electronic patient records, appointment systems, and digital communications.

What it covers

  • Data breach response costs
  • Cyber extortion or ransomware incidents
  • IT forensic investigation
  • Business interruption due to system failure

Why it’s essential

Healthcare data is particularly sensitive, and cyber incidents can halt operations quickly. A cyber policy helps fund response efforts and manage reputational risk.


Management Liability and Legal Expenses Cover

Practice leaders face exposure to employment disputes, regulatory investigations, and allegations of mismanagement.

What it covers

  • Employment tribunal defence
  • Regulatory investigation support
  • Certain legal disputes with suppliers or third parties

Why it’s essential

Even well-run practices can face disputes. Management liability and legal expenses cover help protect leadership and contain legal costs.


Building a Comprehensive Insurance Strategy

For GP surgeries and medical practices, insurance isn’t about buying a single policy—it’s about layering protection:

  • Clinical risk → Medical indemnity
  • Key person and absence risk → Locum, absence, and staff sickness insurance
  • Workplace and visitor risk → Employers’ and public liability
  • Physical and financial risk → Buildings, contents, and business interruption
  • Digital risk → Cyber insurance
  • Governance risk → Management liability and legal expenses

Each cover addresses a different vulnerability. Together, they form a safety net that allows the practice to focus on delivering care without being derailed by unforeseen events.

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