Practice Charter Standards
These are the local standards set within the practice for the benefit of our
patients. It is our job to give you treatment and advice. Following discussion
with you, you will receive the most appropriate care, given by suitably qualified
people. No care or treatment will be given without your informed consent. In
the interest of your health it is important for you to understand all the information
given to you. Please ask us questions if you are unsure of anything.
Our Responsibility To You
We are committed to giving you the best possible service.
Names:
People involved in your care will give you their names
and ensure that you know how to contact them. The surgery should be well signposted
and the doctors' names indicated on their surgery doors.
Waiting time: We run an appointment system in this practice.
You will be given a time at which the doctor or nurse hopes to be able to see
you.
Access: You will have access to a doctor rapidly in case of
emergency. We will arrange a home visit as appropriate for those who are genuinely
too ill or infirm to be brought to the surgery.
Telephone: We will try to answer the phone promptly and to ensure
that there are sufficient staff available to do this. You should be able to speak
to a doctor by telephone.
Test Results: If you have undergone tests or x-rays ordered
by the practice, we will inform you of the results at your next appointment or
you may ring in for results. If no further appointment needs to be arranged,
we will advise you when and how to obtain the results.
Respect: Patients will be treated as individuals and partners
in their healthcare, irrespective of their ethnic origin or religious and cultural
beliefs.
Information: We will give you full information about the services
we offer. Every effort will be made to ensure that you receive that information
which directly affects your health and the care being offered.
Health Promotion: The practice will offer patients advice and
information on: steps they can take to promote good health and avoid illness;
self help which can be undertaken without reference to a doctor in the case of
minor ailments.
Health Records: You have the right to see your health records,
subject to limitations in the law. These will be kept confidential at all times.
Your Responsibility To Us:
Help us to help you.
Please let us know if you change your name, address or telephone
number.
Please do everything you can to keep appointments. Tell us as
soon as possible if you cannot. Otherwise, other patients may have to wait longer. A summary of our policy regarding late arrivals can be seen below.
Please ask for home visits by the doctor only when the person
is too ill to visit the surgery.
Please keep your phone call brief and avoid calling during the
peak morning time for non-urgent matters.
Test results take time to reach us, so please do not ring before
you have been asked to do so. Enquiries about tests ordered by the hospital should
be directed to the hospital, not the practice.
We ask that you treat the doctors and practice staff with courtesy
and respect.
Please read our practice booklet.
Along wth this website it will help you to get
the best out of the services we offer.
It is important that you understand the information given to
you. Please ask us questions if you are unsure of anything.
Remember, you are responsible for your own health and the health
of your children. We will give you our professional help and advice.
Please act upon it.
Late Arrivals for appointments:
If a patient is late for a routine appointment, it is practice policy to ask the patient to make another appointment; however, the doctor or nurse may still see you if time allows. Our surgery is a busy one, and good time keeping is essential if we are to provide patients with the service they expect. We do ask for your patience if the health care professional you have an appointment with is running late. We endeavour to run to time but the nature of our work does not always allow this to be possible.
Complaints Procedure
We always try to provide the best services possible, but there may be times
when you feel this has not happened. The following information explains our in-house
complaints procedure, drawn-up to respond to patient grievances. Our practice
procedure is not able to deal with questions of legal liability or compensation.
We hope you will use it to allow us to look into and, if necessary, correct any
problems that you have identified or mistakes that have been made. If you use
this procedure it will not affect your right to complain to the Healthcare Commission.
Please note that we have to respect our duty of confidentiality to patients and
a patient's consent will be necessary if a complaint is not made by the patient
in person. If you wish to make a complaint, please telephone or write to Dr Kapil
Kedia, the practice complaints lead. Full details will be taken and a decision
made on how best to undertake the investigation.
We believe it is important to deal with complaints swiftly, so you may be offered
an appointment for a meeting to discuss the details within seven days. Occasionally
it may take longer, but we will keep you informed throughout. You may bring a
friend or relative with you to the meeting where we will try to address your
concerns, provide you with an explanation and discuss any action that may be
needed.
Confidentiality
We ask you for personal information so that you can receive appropriate care
and treatment. This information is recorded on computer and we are registered
under the Data Protection Act. The practice will ensure that patient confidentiality
is maintained at all times by all members of the practice team. However, for
the effective functioning of a multi-disciplinary team it is sometimes necessary
that medical information about you is shared between members of the team.
Comments And Suggestions
We are happy to accept and consider comments and suggestions from our patients.
Please present your views in writing at reception or use our suggestions box.
Zero Tolerance
We strongly support the NHS policy on zero tolerance. Anyone attending the
surgery who abuses the GPs, staff or other patients be it verbally, physically
or in any threatening manner whatsoever, will risk removal from the practice
list. In extreme cases we may summon the police to remove offenders from the
practice premises.
Freedom Of Information
The Freedom of Information Act 2000 obliges the practice to produce a publication
scheme. A publication scheme is a guide to the 'classes' of information the practice
intends to routinely make available.
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