this post was submitted on 28 Jan 2024
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Went in on Friday. I asked if I could discuss another issue and was (politely) told that because it's a ten minute appointment that I'd have to come back again to discuss that issue.

Which seemed...well both shit and a recipe for absolute disaster given how difficult it is for most people to see their GP even once.

So, was she right or should I be more brazen next time?

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[–] seabromd@lemmy.world 19 points 9 months ago (1 children)

You're right that it's frustrating, but it's a no win situation (I'm a GP myself, btw).

  • There aren't enough GPs, there just aren't, so time is scarce. All the surgeries are overloaded.
  • each issue NEEDS time. People feel very confident of what they need sometimes, but that isn't how medicine works. We need to assess, get the details, to give a right diagnosis and treatment
  • every extra little thing, borrowed minute, carries forward. An extra 10 minutes at every other appointment turns into hours by the end of the day - unacceptable delays for patients and the staff.
  • there is so much added paperwork for each of these things. Most of us finish our clinic at 4-5 and then still have a couple of hours of paperwork.
  • most of us are so very burnt out at this point, and appointments becoming more complicated, demands getting higher, pushes us further towards giving up.

It isn't the patient's fault, but it is the reality. People fall through the cracks, important things gets missed, we know this and hate it too. We call it moral injury, the phenomenon of building pain because we can't actually meet people's needs or fully do what is right.

I hope the reply is clear that this isn't push back. We wish we had more time with each patient. We wish we didn't need to reign it in, but we're already stretched too thin. We know it's frustrating. We're frustrated too

[–] Fudoshin@feddit.uk -4 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

I’m a GP myself, btw

Bullshit. You're a Physician Associate aren't you? I just went through all the "doctors" on my local GPs surgery and a lot of them are PAs. Including the ones who said "we can't prescribe anti-psychotics anymore as GPs"*. Even though I was begging them to cos the voices were killing me. Couple of weeks later I was taken to hospital in a coma after a suicide attempt - cos the voices wouldn't stop!! And no one would help me.

Oh and I also went to my local A&E 5 fucking times begging for help cos the voices were threatening to torture and kill me.

Yes I said the magic words - "I'm going to kill myself".

They said: "Sorry but we've no beds - go home".

I'm tempted to complain to the NHS, hospital and MP but considering I do just want to fucking die, still, what's the point?

/Rant

*They said only psychiatrists can prescribe them! I've been prescribed quetiapine before by GPs but apparently something changed. Personally I think it's just PA's can't prescribe them.