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Skin warts.

(37 Posts)
sixtiesgirl Wed 03-Oct-12 17:49:57

In recent years I have twice attended a dermatologist via a referral by my doctor to have flat brown warts removed from various parts of my torso by the Hystofreeze method. These warts are not only very unsightly but hurt when catching on clothes and when bathing. However, the warts return over a period of time and so need to be treated again.
On visits to two doctors recently I was told that they were no longer aloud to refer these warts to a dermatologist. So I asked the doctors redpectively to do it themselves and was quickly told that 'they weren't paid to do it'.
"Do you mean that I am being refused this treatment completely"? I asked, and they said "well, you know, these things come along as we get older, I wouldn't worry about it, it is considered to be aesthetic/cosmetic not medical". I then posed the question "if I was a teenager with acne on my face, would you refuse to treat it?" This question was not answered.
I let these doctors know that I was unhappy with this situation and felt my age (65) was being used as an excuse for refusing treatment.
Both these doctors finally treated my warts on each of these two visits, not, I might add, as well as the dermatologist had done previously.
I hope my fellow 'Gransneters' feel able to stand up to less than adequate communication skills from their doctors and to question refusals of treatments like this.

JO4 Thu 04-Oct-12 18:03:40

jeni I'm definitely getting shorter.

jeni Thu 04-Oct-12 18:05:44

I must admit, Quasimodo was crossing my mind as well!grin

JO4 Thu 04-Oct-12 18:33:07

blush It's not that bad!!!

sad

jeni Thu 04-Oct-12 18:40:13

grin look on the bright side of life te tum te tum te tumte tum!

JO4 Thu 04-Oct-12 19:07:00

Yeah, and we know the next verse of that one, don't we. hmm

JO4 Thu 04-Oct-12 19:07:15

grin

petallus Thu 04-Oct-12 19:45:39

My brother has a huge wart on his upper back and his doctor said he can only get it removed on the NHS if it causes a problem (like catching on clothes) but not for purely cosmetic reasons.

My daughter has varicose veins which she hates the look of; also they ache. However, her doctor says these cannot be dealt with on the NHS because they are not painful enough.

You have to wait until you are in quite a bit of pain to get a hip replaced on the NHS. They won't do it whilst it only hurts a bit.

So removing warts on the NHS for cosmetic reasons? I think not!

jeni Thu 04-Oct-12 19:53:45

I don't think orthopaedic surgeons remove warts! Do they?

annodomini Thu 04-Oct-12 20:06:48

Only if the said warts are on the bits they're amputating....wink

Nanadogsbody Thu 04-Oct-12 21:38:53

Nice one anno wink

TriciaF Tue 07-Jun-16 14:52:36

I'm reviving this thread because I have a facial wart, near my ear , under some hair. I noticed Jings said she scratched hers to get rid, but doesn't that cause them to spread? Mine is very itchy.
I showed the doctor but he said it wasn't serious, looked at it with some special glasses that can detect cancer.
I asked about it in the pharmacy and all she suggested was put a dressing on. Which I've done, just a tiny patch of tape.
So Jings, how is yours doing? Has it spread?