News:

FLU clinics

1 10 2010

8 10 2010

12 10 2010

19 10 2010

2-5pm

 

Taking Medicines Out of the UK

An NHS patient travelling abroad may ask their surgery for a FP10 repeat prescription to cover their time abroad. This is at the discretion of the surgery but can be for no longer than 3 months. This will give the patient enough medication to last until they can make arrangements for supply in the country they are visiting. The Department of Health recommends that the period for which prescriptions should be issued is best decided by the patient’s GP, taking into account his detailed knowledge of the patient’s medical history and current condition. When a doctor prescribes a drug he is clinically and legally responsible for any results of that decision to prescribe. In view of this it is not considered good clinical practice to prescribe large amounts of medicines to a patient going abroad for an extended period of time, whose progress the GP is not able to monitor.

GMS and PMS regulations state that the PCT shall remove a patient from the doctor's list where a patient intends to be away from the UK for a period of  3 mths, or has been absent from the UK for 3 or more months. It follows that prescriptions should not be issued for longer than 3 months, at which time the practice is deemed no longer responsible for providing patient care. This does not preclude re-registering patients on their return, or treating them as Temporary residents for emergency treatment if they visit the UK.  

 

TEMPORARY RESIDENTS

Please note that temporary residents should attend their own gp or private clinic at Waters Green for Travel Vaccines

BLOOD RESULTS

Please be advised that we will only contact you with results if they are not normal

Physiotherapy Service

Patients have to be referred by their GP for this Service

Patient Forum

Dates to be decided

Ear syringing.

Before asking about this please put olive oil in your ears for at least two weeks.

Travel Advice

Please contact the Assura clinic at Water's Green

Letter from the BMA

Quality of Care and GP Opening Hours - Protecting the NHS

Dear Patient,

Your GP's surgery works hard to ensure that most patients can be seen as soon as possible, using the resources that are given to us by the Government.

We understand that many patients have to work and sometimes may struggle to get an appointment time that fits in with work and other committments. At present, your GP surgery is contracted to provide services between 8am - 6.30pm Monday to Friday and out of hours care is provided by your local Primary Care Organisation.

We work hard to ensure that those who need emergency appointments can see a doctor as soon as possible and satisfaction levels with GP services remain very high. Nationally eight out of ten patients say they are happy with current opening hours.

You may have read reports that GPs have refused to extend their opening hours for patients. In fact, the BMA, the doctors' trade union, has offered for GPs to work longer hours. However, we would not want patient care to suffer as a result of any changes. The Government is not offering any extra money for the surgeries to open longer and we want to ensure that longer opening hours are properly funded. For this reason we currently remain opposed to the proposed changes.

This letter aims to explain why we think this, and why we are fearful that the Government may be using this issue to introduce further reforms, through the back door, that will affect patient care.

There are 250 million consultations with GPs in the UK every year. Most appointments are needed by elderly people, small children and patients with long term conditions. These patients require a high level of service during the day. We believe it is a fundamental value of the NHS that those who need the care most, are most able to access a GP and support services. If surgeries were to stay open for longer, and no extra money was made available for this, then we fear that there will be fewer appointments and resources available for these patients.

Although the Government may present their plans as 'patient friendly' or responding to 'consumer' demand a GP service is not the same as a supermarket or bank. We know that for our patients, quality is the most important concern, and that we will not offer our best service if we are continually undermined by reforms that do not offer real benefits to patients.

There is no benefit to patients of a surgery opening for longer if the quality of care is poorer, and the patients who need care most find it harder to get the appointments they need. We are concerned that extended hours are an excuse for the Government in England to introduce large GP surgeries or polyclinics that may be run by multinational companies. GPs are very worried that this will put your local surgeries at risk.

GPs are fighting these reforms, as we do not believe they are right for us or for our patients. Ultimately these reforms could undermine the very basis of the NHS. The NHS is 60 this year, please help us protect it and keep it working for everyone, particularly those who need is most.

We need your support as your GP surgery, as you know it, is under threat. If you value your local surgery and the NHS please defend it by:

Writing to

. Writing to your Primary Care Organisation (Primary Care Trust in England and Health Board in Scotland, Northern Ireland, and Wales) telling them you do not agree with these changes and do not want them.

. Write to the local or national press telling them you are against these changes and  why.

.Write to your MP and tell them how much you value your local surgery, do not want to lose the relationship with your family doctor and do not want to see the breakup of NHS general practice that this government is planning.

Thank you for taking the time to read this letter.

The BMA would like to know what you think of this letter. Please send any comments to savingyoursurgery@bma.org.uk