Surgery

kentishman

Well-Known Member
Messages
53
I am 86 years old and have been a diabetic for over 40 years. Recently,if there is a medical problem of any kind I have to ring the surgery and later, the doctor phones back and the diagnosis and prescribing is done over the phone.
I find this entirely unstaisfactory being treated this way by GPs who earn £100,000 a year and do a four and half day week with no nights or weekends. They are also reluctant to make home visits.
When I was a boy all those years ago the GP was a dedicated man who single handed ran a surgery, night and day.
Gell
 

sugarless sue

Master
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10,098
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Rude people! Not being able to do the things I want to do.
Can't you demand a face to face appointment with him then? Surely he must actually see some patients.If you are not happy with this please complain to the practice manager of the surgery or the PCT for your area.
 

candy1567

Well-Known Member
Messages
120
Hi

It is extremely unprofessional and poor practice to diagnose and prescribe over the phone without a consultation. You cannot diagnose over the phone, if GP's start doing this then the A & E departments which are overstretched as it is will be full of misdiagnosed patients and will become bottlenecked.

The body is a complex peice of equipment and with so much that can go wrong with it, it needs a hands on approach, with some patients who trivialise their symptoms this is seriously dangerous and leaves the GP open to malpractice.

I for one wouldn't be on a doctors list who diagnosed over the phone

Juliexx
 

viv1969

Well-Known Member
Messages
409
I believe you are entitled to a face-to-face appointment with a Dr within the practice (not necessarily YOUR GP) within 72 hours of requesting one, according to the patient's charter; though I could be wrong and this could be simply a government target. I've pressed my own surgery over it more than once, and on each occassion they've caved and booked me in.

I think you're being treated appallingly.
 

mikeyuk

Active Member
Messages
43
If you ring up and request an appointment, you must be offered one.

However, a lot of problems can be addressed over the phone and telephone consultations are fairly common. Bottom line is if you ring up for an appointment in no way should you be refused. Dont get into the symptoms, problems or whatever, simply ask for an appointment or a double appointment if you have more than one problem to discuss. If you don't get one for whatever reason, complain to the practice manager.

As for home visits, yes Doctors are reluctant to do these for anyone who is able to get to the surgery due to demand. And this seems fair enough imo.
 

kentishman

Well-Known Member
Messages
53
Thanks for replies to this. All initial consultations are by phone but if the doctor decides it needs an examination a surgery visit will be arranged. This has two problems. It is very unlikely that the surgery consultation could be the same day and a retired GP friend has said to me that when he was in prctice observation was 50% of his diagnosis.
To give an example. I suffer fro bouts of prostatitus. He has pescribed two lots of anti-biotics over the phone. My previous GP would see me and give a rectal examination
It is easy to say change yout doctor but all the doctors in the practice are the same and at my age going elsewhere is a major undertaking.
Face it folks, it won't be long before your GP climbs on the bandwagon.
 

sugarless sue

Master
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10,098
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Rude people! Not being able to do the things I want to do.
Our GP practice does do phone consults but it is the opposite way round ,you have to request a phone consult otherwise you get a face to face.
 

Trinkwasser

Well-Known Member
Messages
2,468
Our surgery offloads a lot of routine stuff onto nurses and nurse prescribers. This ensures that when you NEED a doctor one is readily available. They will do telephone consults but mainly for repeat prescriptions or discussions of ongoing problems for which they have already seen you, for anything else they will insist you come in. In emergencies you will be seen on the spot by a triage nurse who will then fetch a doctor immediately when required. This also ensures that the doctors have time to make home visits

So it just goes to show how differently they organise these things in different places.

One plus point, the less often you visit the surgery the less likely you are to get cross-contaminated! Maybe your doctors are afraid they will catch something if they have to see ill people.