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Friday, 26 July 2024

It's personal

A letter arrived the other day from our Medical Practice. 
So, from April I will have my own personal doctor. Does that mean last April 2024, or is it to start next April 2025? Not sure. Is this a new initiative, an attempt at a massive overhaul of the declining standards of the NHS. A clean sweep. Everything that has gone wrong with health care in the past can be pushed aside and forgotten about. Let's hope that this is the turning point to a more personal approach to patient care, rather than communication with a robotic voice through a keyboard. 
I feel I ought to test this out to see if it works. Perhaps I should start to build a personal relationship with my named GP. My last experience with medical matters a few months back was not a big success. In fact it was a waste of time. After years of not seeing a doctor I am reluctant to try again. 
Friday morning and it's a sunny start to the day. Stay positive and have a good weekend. 
Thanks for popping in. Toodle pip. ilona

8 comments:

  1. I read your post with some amusement Ilona! My hubby and myself have a named doctor, this has been the case for a few years now. But, it's a case of having to book 2-3 weeks in advance for an appointment with him, otherwise we have to see a nurse practitioner. Due to this arrangement, the nurse practitioner missed the fact that I had whooping cough two years ago. By the time I was referred to my GP, the germ had a real hold and the correct antibiotics were prescribed too late to be effective.

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    1. Well so much for looking after the best interests of the patient then. It's getting to be a bit of a joke. Anything can happen in 2 - 3 weeks.

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  2. Named doctor - sounds good but in my experience it makes little difference. Husband has a chronic illness, has been well looked after by specialist hospitals, and had lots of emergency hospital admissions, procedures and changes to medication - and not one peep or follow up from his “named “ doctor. Primary care has deteriorated under the Tories.

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    1. I think if someone is already dealing with illness and the wheels are in motion to get the right treatment, there isn't much point of a named doctor if they are not going to support the patient.

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  3. I have a named doctor ( I think) Haven't been near the surgery in five years other than to stick my arm in a machine for a blood pressure reading last year. It was a case of go into the empty room , follow the instructions on the machine and hand the reading to the receptionist.

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  4. I still have a GP with a surgery of his own where I can go without an appointment if necessary. But he is nearing retirement age, and I am afraid he will not find a successor. So we will get a MVZ (medical care center) with several doctors.
    Hilde in Germany

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  5. My doctor's surgery here is very good. I phoned for an appointment as I had an eye infection and was seen 4 hours later. Tried the chemist first but they can only prescribe for a few conditions. Our surgery also has a sit and wait appointment system for urgent cases if there are no appointments left. You go at 5pm and wait in turn but will definitely see a GP. Can be over an hour though.
    Sally from Devon

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