BrianTheElder
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 574
- Location
- Surrey, UK
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Diet only
- Dislikes
- Snide people
Yes you have to request it. There is a form to complete and a doctor has to sign it off. I was given the form at the same time as requesting access.Do you have to request this particular service re medical record etc? On my Patient Access I can only access repeat medication or book appointments. Nothing in the Medical Record Section bar Allergies (of which I have none) and Meds. Maybe different practices have different rules on what they make available?
I recently had a blood test, so I had a look on my medical history online in Patient Access to look at previous results, only to find all my records were missing.
That is to say, my Medical History on Patient Access had been stripped.
Even subheadings have been removed - problems, test results, documents, consultations, immunisations. Only medications and immunisations subheadings remained and only repeat precriptions were shown.
I enquired at the practice and no-one knew what had happened. I was advised to fill out a new application form, but that was pointless because I already had a Patient Access account. It says on Patient Access that only the GP can change these records.
I had a telephone appointment with a doctor to discuss the test results, but they had no idea what was going on, and they pomised to follow up.
Finally, this morning, I rang again and asked to speak to the Practice Manager, who was away, again. After a short delay and many side conversations I could overhear at the other end, I was told that the GP Practice policy has changed and that access to records would only be given a month at a time, after which you would have to re-apply!
Surely that is against the government guidelines, it is my data after all, not theirs!
Has anyone alse had this happen and does anyone have any advice on what I can do about it, please?
I have the same issue - when I ask about 6 months when I would be given access to my records in line with the NHS instruction a couple of years ago I was told that my practice didn’t sign up to it when they rolled it out so I can only make appointments and order repeat meds.Do you have to request this particular service re medical record etc? On my Patient Access I can only access repeat medication or book appointments. Nothing in the Medical Record Section bar Allergies (of which I have none) and Meds. Maybe different practices have different rules on what they make available?
it is my data after all, not theirs!
A few years ago I wanted to have full details of my medical records and submitted a ‘Subject Access Request’to the GP surgery. I was charged £50 and given a room in the practice and, accompanied by an admin assistant, (who was there should I need any help) spent several hours going through all the paper records that had accumulated over my lifetime. I took copies of letters and test results I felt were important. Glad I did , as I think these have since been archived (culled /destroyed) . Some relevant and important documents. I am not sure if the info from them would have been lost forever, as the online record I have access to now does not have all the details that were in paper record.
Never even thought about it to be honest as each time I had a blood test I went an and asked for a print out and always filed them and every consultant result etc I received trough the post. Would be handy though as most of the consultants I have seen over the years seem blissfully unaware on why you are there and certainly have never seen results of other consultations you have had. A fully shared record would improve the communication between health professionals as well, in my case anyway!
A fully shared record would improve the communication between health professionals as well, in my case anyway!
Pipp - On my way to a fairly recent PPG meeting, going through the corridors, we passed through the record archive. It is just thousand, upon thousands of old-stylee medical records, in their buff folder/envelopes, files alphabetically. I asked if my ancient records would be in there somewhere. The response was along the lines of, "Yes. Nothing is destroyed."
Max - I had a hospital clinic appointment on Monday (by telephone), as a new referral to a discipline I had never consulted before.
I was more than a little sceptical what could come out of it, bearing in mind how little they would know about me. It was a Consultant > Consultant referral. However, the consulting doctor clearly had access to my historic blood results, done in both primary and secondary care..
Additionally, about 2 years ago I saw an Endo, privately, but he had reviewed my GP records, and another Endo's notes and comments.
The latter, I'm not entirely how correct it was for him, in a non-NHS setting, to access my NHS records, but in terms of making progress, it was helpful to me.
My wife had to go to hospital for a pre-op assessment. The consultant apologised for keeping us waiting saying that she had been reading my wife's notes, the folder was on her desk. My wife remarked how thick the folder was and the consultant said "Oh that's nothing some patient's notes run into several volumes".
I think if a consultant hasn't got your notes it is probably because they haven't bothered to request them. Van loads of notes are still being ferried between GPs and hospitals every day, all rather pathetic in 2020.
I wonder Tom Penis and Harry any better
How odd
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