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For PCN Clinical Directors and Practice Managers, ARRS funding has been transformational — but only for networks that approach it strategically. Too many PCNs continue to treat ARRS recruitment as a reactive, ad hoc exercise: identifying a gap, placing a job advert, and hoping for the best. The result is persistent underspend, high turnover, and ARRS staff who are underutilised or poorly integrated. This guide sets out a strategic approach to PCN workforce planning that maximises ARRS value and builds a genuinely sustainable clinical team.

Start with Patient Need, Not Job Titles

The most common mistake in ARRS workforce planning is starting with the available roles rather than with the clinical need of the patient population. The right question is not "which ARRS roles can we recruit for?" but "what are our highest-volume, highest-risk clinical demands, and which roles are best placed to address them?"

A PCN with a large elderly population in care homes has fundamentally different needs to a network in a young, urban area with high same-day access demand and a significant mental health caseload. Before any recruitment, analyse your patient data, GP appointment types, referral patterns, and QOF performance — and let that analysis drive your role decisions.

The Optimal Clinical Mix: A Framework

Most PCNs of 30,000–50,000 patients benefit from a diversified ARRS team across four core workforce areas:

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ANP / ACP (1–2 WTE)
Highest GP capacity release
Autonomous consultation across acute and chronic presentations. The most direct substitute for GP appointment demand. Prioritise independent prescribers for maximum impact.
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Clinical Pharmacist (1 WTE)
Best return on investment
Structured medication reviews, high-risk drug monitoring, medicines optimisation. NHS England data shows 1 WTE clinical pharmacist can release approximately 1,500 GP appointments per year.
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Paramedic Practitioner (1 WTE)
Home visit & urgent care
Home visiting, same-day urgent presentations, minor illness. Dramatically reduces GP home visit burden and extends same-day access capacity across the network.
🤝
Social Prescribing Link Worker
Demand reduction
Addresses social determinants of health — reducing inappropriate appointment demand from patients whose primary needs are social, not clinical. High return in deprived areas.
💡 ROI Insight

A full-time clinical pharmacist releasing 1,500 GP appointments per year — at a GP consultation cost of approximately £45 — represents £67,500 of capacity released annually, at zero direct cost to the PCN under ARRS. Across a typical PCN ARRS allocation, a well-planned clinical mix can release the equivalent of 2–3 full GP sessions per week.

Recruitment Timelines: Plan for the Real World

ARRS underspend is consistently driven by one factor above all others: recruitment that starts too late. Most PCN Clinical Directors underestimate how long it takes to move from "we need an ANP" to "our ANP starts on Monday." Realistic timelines are:

Q1 — Plan
Define roles & confirm budget
Map patient need, confirm ARRS allocation, define roles and supervision arrangements
Q2 — Recruit
Advertise & interview
ANP/ACP: 8–14 weeks. Pharmacist: 6–10 weeks. Paramedic: 6–10 weeks. Start process no later than May
Q3 — Onboard
Induction & supervision
New starters begin; supervision arrangements activated; induction and caseload building
Q4 — Optimise
Review & plan ahead
Review performance, plan next year's recruitment, address any vacancies before year-end

Supervision: The Foundation Everything Rests On

Every ARRS role requires appropriate clinical supervision, and every PCN that has struggled with ARRS performance has, at its root, a supervision problem. Before recruiting any ARRS clinician, answer these questions unambiguously:

⚠️ Common Pitfall

PCNs that recruit ARRS staff without a named supervisor, dedicated supervision time, and a structured induction plan consistently report the same outcomes: the clinician is underutilised, GP partners become resentful of the added complexity, and the role turns over within 12 months. Plan supervision before you recruit — not after the new starter arrives.

Retention: The Most Underinvested Priority

High turnover in ARRS roles is far more expensive than most PCNs account for. Direct recruitment costs, agency fees, the management time of a new hiring process, and the clinical disruption of an empty role typically add up to six to twelve months of the departing clinician's salary. Yet most PCNs invest heavily in recruitment and almost nothing in retention.

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Structured Induction
A formal induction programme with protected learning time in the first four to eight weeks significantly improves retention at the 12-month mark
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Career Development
Clear career pathway conversations at 6 and 12 months. ARRS clinicians who can see a development pathway stay significantly longer than those who cannot
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Competitive Pay
ARRS covers employment costs but PCNs can top up salaries from other income streams. Benchmarking against the local market annually prevents unnecessary turnover
👥
Team Integration
ARRS clinicians who are included in practice MDT meetings, clinical governance, and team social events report higher job satisfaction and stay longer
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Regular Supervision
Consistent, quality supervision is itself a retention tool. Clinicians who feel clinically supported and professionally seen are far less likely to leave
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Workload Management
Ensuring ARRS clinicians have appropriate caseloads — not being used to fill every gap — prevents burnout and demonstrates the PCN values their sustainability

Working with a Specialist Agency

For many PCNs, the fastest route to solving immediate ARRS gaps — while longer-term permanent recruitment completes — is working with a specialist primary care recruitment agency. SHR Group maintains an active network of ARRS-eligible ANPs, ACPs, clinical pharmacists, and paramedic practitioners across England, and can often place pre-verified candidates significantly faster than a standalone job advertisement process.

Agencies can also advise on role eligibility, help you sense-check your role specifications against ARRS requirements, and provide interim locum ARRS cover that counts toward your allocation while permanent recruitment is underway.

Need Help Building Your ARRS Team?

SHR Group works with PCN Clinical Directors on strategic workforce planning — advising on clinical mix, ARRS funding windows, and sourcing pre-verified candidates from our active network across England.

Tags:PCN WorkforceARRSClinical MixWorkforce PlanningPCN DirectorNHS Primary CareRetention