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Getting a doctor's appointment

(55 Posts)
Antonia Sun 05-Nov-17 11:08:10

I have just moved to the UK (at the end of August) after 17 years living in France. I am finding myself very confused about the two health systems. For instance, I have pre diabetes and in France, had a blood test every three months, or whenever I requested one. Here I am told it will be 'near my birthday!' in other words once a year. In France there was a yearly appointment with a heart specialist, but when I asked about that the doctor just looked bemused and asked why I would want a heart specialist. At the moment I need to see a doctor and when I try to get an appointment, in a clinical practice where there are at least 8 doctors, I find there is nothing at all available for the next two weeks! I knew before we moved that the NHS wasn't great but I find it worse than I expected. What do people do here when they need a doctor? I want to see one soon, not in a couple of weeks. I will try a chemist instead.

rossalex Tue 05-Oct-21 13:04:13

Message deleted by Gransnet for breaking our forum guidelines. Replies may also be deleted.

Morgana Thu 16-Nov-17 18:41:53

You do have to 'fight' now to get what u want from G.P. D.H. is diabetic and has a six month check up at diabetes clinic. We did have to fight for it.

Morgana Thu 16-Nov-17 18:39:48

I was joking really Antonia

Antonia Thu 16-Nov-17 08:41:26

puppytoe I don't know if it was an ECG I had; it involved being hooked up to sensors linked to a computer while I pedalled a static bicycle as fast as I could (I won't be competing in the Tour de France, it seems). Morgana we loved France but came back partly to see more of our family, so unfortunately going back isn't an option.

Morgana Thu 16-Nov-17 01:00:36

Very much depends on where you live and on how good the practice is. Afraid to say it is going to get very much worse: not enough staff, not enough money, services being privatised. Until we have a government which cares for its people, nothing will change. (Not saying that has to be a left leaning one). I should go back to France if I were you!!!

Grandma2213 Thu 16-Nov-17 00:11:30

My DS has had a knee injury for a week and rang for a GP appointment today at 8am as it was no better. No appointments for two weeks! Usually from 8am you are in an everlasting queue, in my case once for over half an hour. If you redial you go further down the queue. Some excellent GPs have left the surgery over the last year and do not seem to have been replaced. I can't blame them, seeing the pressure they are under.

Hospital appointments are as bad, often being cancelled by text at the last minute, sometimes even before I knew I even had an appointment! Today I received a text saying I had an appointment on Tuesday at 9am. This was the first I knew about it and is not in my local hospital. At that time of day it will take me well over an hour to drive the 8 miles to get there, not to mention extra time for impossible parking.

In the past the specialist used to have a clinic at my local hospital one day a week. It used to take me 10 minutes drive, maybe half an hour wait and 10 minutes home. The specialist team of maybe 4/5 people driving 8 miles instead of hundreds of patients! It's not rocket science!!

It is possible I will not be back to pick up DGC from school at 3pm after this one so I will have to have someone on standby!

judylow Thu 16-Nov-17 00:05:41

To add a positive note, I can usually get an appointment within a day or two and can book on line or phone. However I do know that this is rare these days.

Nelliemoser Wed 15-Nov-17 23:41:13

It is a post code lottery.
This morning our surgery was fully booked after 10 mins. I was getting low on tablets.
I used the GPs call back service. I had been told to check in with my GP that some new tablets were working and if there were any side effects.

A very short phone call with the Duty GP and a few questions about how I was doing on them and as all was Ok he was then able to issue me another prescription.
That would certainly have saved a consultation.

Willow500 Wed 15-Nov-17 20:29:36

Nigh on impossible to get a same day appointment here - even booking in advance is difficult however I did receive excellent care when something was wrong last year and the doctor even rang me later that night to check how I was. As has already been said money is the problem and there is no way the NHS is going to get better without it. I do know that France has one of the highest taxation systems in Europe and that is due mainly to healthcare - it's good to know it works - we might have to turn to a similar system when ours collapses under the strain!

Telly Wed 15-Nov-17 20:06:23

There is a way of getting an appointment it is a question of finding out how they system works where you are. Talk to the receptionist, and be especially nice! Here you need to phone at 8 am to get seen the same day. Of course you have to have nothing else to do, I don't know how people at work cope. There is also a walk-in centre where you get to see a nurse and they have been quite good. TBH. But the NHS is in dire straights.

Jalima1108 Wed 15-Nov-17 19:25:32

We have to wait for a GP appointment if we wish to see a particular doctor and it is non-urgent. However, an urgent appointment can usually be seen that day, or, if phoning late in the day, the next day.
Hospital appointments are regular and I am seen promptly (sometimes out again before DH has managed to park the car!).

MargaretX Wed 15-Nov-17 19:02:32

I think there is something to be said for both sides. Where Doctors are free to earn a bit more they will order more tests than are needed, that is the same in Germany sometimes. But German doctors are also free to say enough is enough concerning how many patients they have and then a doctor need not be over worked. Nurses are not allowed to prescribe anything in Germany, so you automatically see the doctor him/herself
We lived again in the UK 20 years ago and decided to return to Germany exactly because we were getting near retirement and thought the German medical system would be better for us. That was a decision we have not regretted. It was the right thing to do.
An urgent case gets to see the doctor immediately and the rest have to wait a couple of days. Specialists can take a month or two if not urgent.

puppytoe Wed 15-Nov-17 17:21:00

My husband has had an ECG as part of his diabetes treatment. It was done in the GP surgery. Is this what was offered in the French hospital?

Tegan2 Wed 15-Nov-17 16:38:35

If you've just joined a new practice, you should be given a new patient medical and you will be able to discuss any problems at the time.

Soniah Wed 15-Nov-17 15:01:59

Can't fault our surgery in North Wales, can get an appointment on the day you ring, with the Doctor you want unless they are off and they are excellent at booking blood tests and other routine things in advance.

Yogadatti Wed 15-Nov-17 13:52:14

I think the NHS is awful....it is in decline and you have to fight for everything. This country is reactive not proactive.
I would much prefer a French system. If I have anything urgent I have to pay for it as waiting for appointments with GPS, nhs consultants is generally ridiculously long. How do you know if something is urgent or not? Sometimes you cannot know if the pain you have is serious or not....the whole system is flawed .

willsmadnan Mon 06-Nov-17 18:13:32

Well, I must be the only woman on the planet who transitioned smoothly from the French system to the UK one. After 16 years with CPAM I returned to the Uk and within a month I was back in the NHS. I would also say the French system is not the dream many believe.
Our first medicien general was on the verge of retirement, nice though he was, but he really went through the motions of 2 -monthly appointments just to renew blood pressure meds. Next MG was a lovely lady, but still had to see her every 2 months, but she was forever sending us for blood tests, scans or physio for any ache or pain DH reported! None of these requested I might add. As someone who avoids all health -based appointments it drove me round the bend.
My theory is that as French health care is partially funded by private insurance the whole system is a money making operation. For example each consultation costs 23 euros up front with reimbursement later. Hence the 2 month appointments for prescription renewal.
My new UK GP leaves it to me to decide if I need an appointment. I'm a 'big growed up girl'so I'm more than happy with that.
The NHS isn't perfect, but the neither is the French system although theoretically the idea of partially private health insurance is IMHO much better. The UK would do well to dismantle the present system and consider the alternative.

Luckygirl Mon 06-Nov-17 17:40:36

All practices offer same day appointments for emergencies. If it is not an emergency then it should not be a problem to wait. Is there some urgency about your problem? If so there are also walk-in centres.

When you see the doc you can make a further appointment if needed.

Once you get used to the system I am sure you will find your way round it and get on top of phone consultations, online appointment booking etc.

Coolgran65 Mon 06-Nov-17 17:31:56

I have been with the same GP Practice for 40+ years. Firstly I moved 7 miles distant but stayed with them. Then I moved to my current home which is 13 miles from the Practice. I stay because my medication is complicated and works, and I don't want to run the risk of a new GP Practice deciding to make changes on my (opiod) medication.

I can go on-line and book an appointment with my doctor of choice but that may be in a couple of weeks.

I can ring at 8.30am join the telephone queuing system and ask for an appt for that day but won't be able to choose the GP and the places may all have gone.
I can also request a telephone appointment for that day and can choose from the GPs on duty.

Alternatively I can arrive at the surgery without appointment and before 9.30am. I will see a GP if I wait my turn. Last time I did this it was 1.5 hours wait. I simply took my Kindle and enjoyed the time to read without disturbance smile

M0nica Mon 06-Nov-17 17:00:31

Antonia, The thing to remember is that medicine is an art not a science and that there are cultural differences in the way different medical systems work and how different systems treat the same illness.

In the UK in recent years NICE (National Institute for Health and Care Excellence) has been looking at the treatments for all kinds of conditions to see what works and what doesn't and many checks and procedures have been found unnecessary or ineffective across a range of illnesses and are no longer recommended.

I have a foot in both camps, we live in England but for nearly 30 years have had a holiday home in France and have experience of both systems. I feel that the French system is rather like the American system with doctors ordering all kinds of tests and visits to specialists that are not really necessary because it ups there income and keeps their patients coming to them.

If you have pre-diabetes and it is stable, why would you need to be seen more than once a year? As for the heart specialist: if you have a heart problem of course you should be referred, but you do not mention, whether you have any heart condition, if not why would you need to to see one?

There have been concerns for years about the cost of the French health system to the French tax payer, despite patients having insurance and many articles in papers I have read about trying to reduce the costs by having a supervisory group like NICE to decide what treatments have good evidence and what do not so that patients get far fewer referrals. I think M.Macron has reform of the French health system on his list.

The NHS is not perfect, but it doesn't follow that if you are getting less treatment in the UK for any health problems you have compared with France, that the UK system is worse, it could be that you were being over treated in France.

Antonia Sun 05-Nov-17 17:15:10

maryeliza54 thank you for the useful link.

maryeliza54 Sun 05-Nov-17 16:08:48

There’s no routine heart specialist referrals for people with T1 diabetes. I think that the approach is mainly trying to lower the factors that increase the risks so routine prescription of statins for cholesterol and medication to lower blood pressure ( people with diabetes have lower targets)

Maggiemaybe Sun 05-Nov-17 15:41:50

That's interesting, Antonia. A good friend of mine has Type 1 diabetes and has all sorts of medical checks on a regular basis, but I can't remember her mentioning a heart specialist. Others might know if it's something that happens here.

maryeliza54 Sun 05-Nov-17 14:56:08

www.nice.org.uk/guidance/PH38/chapter/Recommendations#risk-assessment

Antonia Sun 05-Nov-17 14:55:59

maggiemaybe the visit to the heart specialist was a once yearly appointment in France, offered to any diabetes or pre diabetes patient.