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<blockquote data-quote="kesun" data-source="post: 1147031" data-attributes="member: 39776"><p>When I have outpatient appointments at my closest hospital (Tunbridge Wells at Pembury), my GP always receives a report and I'm copied in. However, when I took my husband to A&E last weekend I noticed a sign on the wall saying that this would only happen for A&E visits if he asked for it. </p><p></p><p>My GP did tell me once that A&E reports are usually so generic as to be useless: things like "presented with: HEAD; treatment: REF TO GP" and nothing more!</p><p></p><p>I've also experienced frequent muddles in getting test results between the three hospitals we're closest to (Tunbridge Wells, Eastbourne and Hastings), any London hospital we get referred to and the GP, as well as occasional mis-filings - such as non-fasting bloods classified as fasting.</p><p></p><p>Unfortunately I was too healthy in the past to be able to judge now whether this is a new phenomenon or an old one.</p><p></p><p>Kate</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="kesun, post: 1147031, member: 39776"] When I have outpatient appointments at my closest hospital (Tunbridge Wells at Pembury), my GP always receives a report and I'm copied in. However, when I took my husband to A&E last weekend I noticed a sign on the wall saying that this would only happen for A&E visits if he asked for it. My GP did tell me once that A&E reports are usually so generic as to be useless: things like "presented with: HEAD; treatment: REF TO GP" and nothing more! I've also experienced frequent muddles in getting test results between the three hospitals we're closest to (Tunbridge Wells, Eastbourne and Hastings), any London hospital we get referred to and the GP, as well as occasional mis-filings - such as non-fasting bloods classified as fasting. Unfortunately I was too healthy in the past to be able to judge now whether this is a new phenomenon or an old one. Kate [/QUOTE]
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