Ours are fantastic. No problems at all.
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Ours are fantastic. No problems at all.
Our practice are very good, you can contact them online describing your problem and they invariably get back quickly to give you a telephone or face-to-face appointment if necessary. They also keep in touch by text about vaccinations that are due or check-ups and blood test that are required.
They also have the services of a pharmacist. My husband takes high doses of a lot of different medications and he had a call from the pharmacist one day to discuss them. In the end he reduced the variety of pills and increased the dosage of one of them. Pharmacists are very highly trained and often know more about medications that the GP's, who may simply be using an online list to prescribe.
My most recent GP appointment was face to face with the sort of kindly doctor we all remember, who referred me on appropriately and I have received a specialist appointment date. I donât know how many hours this GP does at our health centre as he is a GP in private practice too. His âbedside mannerâ was second to none.
Thatâs tough NanKate really unacceptable.
Ours is a bit of a palaver, e consult and so on but you can get to see a GP the same day if they think itâs needed.Or at least prescribe something for you to collect.
I have never not been able to get a same day appt ....we just ring at 8am ....or do e consult...then you can choose telephone or face to face ....tbh ....our gp practice has improved since covid....it was all a bit hit and miss before ....its far more slick now
I'm quite lucky really, - I'm having a call from my doctor on the 29th August. I rarely see her face to face.
We have a much reduced doctors where they have two answers to appointment requests which are...
Go to the urgent care centre which is always v busy
Ring 111
as they are 'up to capacity' which I always think makes them sound like a warehouse rather than a doctors surgery.
I think our surgery is doing OK..
Both of us (my husband and I) have had same day appointments recently with a GP (not a nurse or other practice staff).
We're the same NanKate. MrA has been waiting to see a consultant about his hip for 2 years now. Unless you are bleeding all over the floor - in which case you would go straight to A&E anyway - you can't get a phone appointment for 6 weeks (used to be 5). The GP will then pass you on to someone else. Haven't been able to get through at the hospital either to find out about the waiting list.
On the other hand SisInLaw in the NE had her hip operation in six months - yes, NHS - and is now doing really well. She gets a callback from her GP within 4 hours. So much for the rich South đ€
I'm getting a decent service from the GP practice for a problem that arose about a fortnight ago. But I was worried on a Saturday morning and got an appointment with a private GP. It was expensive, ÂŁ185 initial consultation, half an hour. In fact, that GP advised me to stay with the NHS as I'm on a 2-week pathway for consultant phone appointment, hopefully to be followed by procedure to ascertain what the problem is or might be.
We don't have e-consult at our GP practice. You can't go into the surgery to request an appointment. You have to phone at 8.30am and there are only emergency appointments available. You can't book a 'routine' appointment. A GP will then call you back to decide whether you need an emergency appointment or not. I've been trying to get an appointment for months - it's not what I would term as an emergency, but it's something which does need seen to, but I'm going round and round in circles trying to be seen.
There is a private GP in our next village and several at the local private hospital, but how the system works I am not sure.
I didnât know there were private GPS. How does that work? Do they have access to patientsâ records or just whatâs on NHSapp
In some surgeries, (not ours) they evidently have a description and qualifications for each of the titles you get passed around to see.
Doctor, nurse practitioner, medical practitioner, practice nurse, paramedic, pharmacist etc. you have to guess how long theyâve actually held any of those roles for-some look like theyâre just out of 6th form, so you know, theyâre not Doctors.
Some may be very experienced as whatevers. Others may not. Itâs worrying when your life and health is in their hands.
I was just prescribed some medication by a medical practitioner.
When I queried the fact that the info says not to take with another medication, Iâm already taking, she said she would speak to the pharmacist and call me back.
She did call me back with another suggested medication, but said before she added it to a prescription she was going to ask a doctor.
She called me back again with the information that the doctor said the second suggestion was not at all suitable and prescribed something which was suitable and didnât clash with any of my other medications.
DH on the other hand was triaged straight to a pharmacist, who looked at the problem he was asking about, and asked my husband if he knew what it was. DH said no, and the pharmacist said he didnât know either, but DH should try this cream. It hasnât worked. What would you do next?
We have e-consult, but since the doctor the other end is profoundly indifferent, you might as well not bother.
We too have been reduced to going privately and, like others, I wonder how people who cannot afford to manage.
At my surgery we tend to get fobbed off with a paramedic.
Skydancer Iâm with you we have an excellent service a few months ago I had an infected foot I emailed a photo and explanation at 8 am and by 11 am I had spoken to a doctor and told a prescription for antibiotics were waiting for me at the nearest pharmacy and if it didnât improve in three days to alert them.
within 3 hours I had the tablets I needed and everything improved quickly
We also get a same day appointment if necessary
Skydancer
We do an e-consult. Itâs excellent. We are guaranteed to receive a response the same day and we do. If itâs urgent we can ask for a same day appointment. No complaints whatever from us.
Thatâs so good.
Depends where you live.
My daughter down in Brighton can get an appointment by submitting a form online the night before and she has the same doc.
We do an e-consult. Itâs excellent. We are guaranteed to receive a response the same day and we do. If itâs urgent we can ask for a same day appointment. No complaints whatever from us.
We have similar probs, an online service that keeps having technical difficulties so now we have gone back to ringing at 8am and taking our chances, usually the queue is already numbering over 15 so there is no chance of an appointment. And when we do get an appointment is someone new everytime and the last young man wasnât even a doctor, he apologised halfway through saying he would ask the GP in the next room for advice. I thought this was odd so asked the receptionist who the young man was and apparently he was a trainee practitioner. Would be nice to know these things beforehand.
I was listening to Womanâs Hour today when Nuala MacGovern said to a listener âIt would be best to first speaker to your Family Doctor to get adviceâ.
What doctor? I havenât been allowed to visit my/any doctor since Covid. To get some medical advice we have to sign into their website, navigate to where we explain why we need to see/speak to a doctor (having been given a limit on the number of words we can write) and hope we get some response within a week.
My DH needed advice on a heart problem and he was given a telephone appointment 6 months ahead! We had to go private, what happens to those people who canât afford to do that?
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