Mounjaro
Please select the link below before requesting Mounjaro from your GP to see if you meet the criteria. GP’s will not be prescribing this for weight loss.
Mounjaro
Please select the link below before requesting Mounjaro from your GP to see if you meet the criteria. GP’s will not be prescribing this for weight loss.
The Right to Choose (RTC) pathway, gives patients the right to choose their service provider for mental health conditions. More information about the Right to Choose pathway can be found on the NHS England website Your choices in the NHS – NHS.
We understand there are significant waits for ADHD services at present and patients are requesting referrals to a variety of providers under the Right to Choose (RTC) pathway.
Right to Choose Providers are usually private provider companies that hold an NHS contract with one or more NHS commissioners. When choosing a Right to Choose Provider it is important to consider the following points.
Your GP cannot choose for you. You need to research the options and make the choice yourself then contact your GP to inform them of your chosen provider. This list of providers is constantly changing, and the services’ websites are usually a good place to find out if they offer the service you need. One point of reference for RTC providers is ADHD UK: https://adhduk.co.uk/
If you would like to be referred for an ADHD assessment, please go online and search for ‘Right To Choose (ADHD)’ and scroll down to Patient information where you will be asked to:
1) Download and complete an ASRS form – if this has not already been completed.
2) Download and amend the letter to include your details (including your email address) and address this to the GP.
Please then post or bring the form and letter to the surgery.
Currently we only accept Shared Care Agreements from certain providers if medication is required, please contact us to check prior to submitting your application.
Sometimes the care of a patient is shared between two doctors (usually a GP and a specialist) and there is a formalised written ‘shared care agreement’. If a specialist asks a GP to enter into a ‘shared care agreement’, it is voluntary and at the discretion of the Practice. Often the GP will be asked to take over prescribing of a drug, and to monitor the patient by ensuring e.g. blood tests are done at regular intervals. It is usually the role of the specialist to review the patient periodically and advise regarding dose changes or adverse drug effects.
Most commonly the specialist in the ‘shared care agreement’ will be working within a team that is classified as an ‘NHS provider’ and has been approved by local commissioners. This means they will be following best practices and will be willing to adhere to locally agreed protocols.
Sometimes due to current long waiting times, patients may want to exercise their ‘right to choose’ and ask for a referral to an independent provider who holds an NHS contract. In some instances, these providers may only help a patient to obtain a diagnosis, but they will not offer follow up as described above in a ‘shared care agreement’. In these circumstances, the GP would not be able to safely prescribe or monitor medication for the diagnosed condition, and patients should be mindful of this when choosing a provider.
Seeing A Specialist Privately – What Is The Process?
For patients using private health insurance e.g. BUPA, AXA etc
You will need to contact your private health insurer to gain authorisation before making your appointment. The Practice will write a referral letter if they feel this is appropriate, and this will include any relevant medical details about you. Please let our secretaries know who you are seeing and where.
Please note that if an insurance company wishes for a specific form to be completed you may be charged for this additional work.
For patients who do not have a health insurance policy
If you do not have private health insurance and wish to book directly with a private clinic, you can arrange an appointment. You may be able to access a private specialist without a referral letter. If a referral letter is needed, the Practice will write one if they feel this is appropriate, and this will include any relevant medical details about you. Please let our secretaries know who you are seeing and where.
Should you have any questions regarding your appointment you should contact the specialist’s team or your private healthcare provider directly not the Practice.
What happens if I need a test or procedure?
If the specialist thinks that you need any tests, including blood tests or a surgical procedure, then the specialist or their team are responsible for:
Considerations regarding medications
Private doctors/specialists may suggest medications to patients which wouldn’t normally be prescribed by NHS GPs or that are outside the parameters of a ‘shared care agreement’. If this is the case, you can obtain your medication via a private prescription from the specialist. Similarly, if monitoring is required for a privately issued medication to be taken safely, the specialist should have access to their own facilities for e.g. blood tests.
Follow up after private treatment
It is important to note that in some instances e.g. weight loss surgery, if undertaken privately either in the UK or abroad, you will not be entitled to follow up within the NHS.
If you would like to make a formal complaint about any aspect of your experience here at Hungerford Medical Centre, please do so to the Practice Manager at Hungerford Medical Centre, School Crescent, Crewe, Cheshire, CW1 5HA.
Please try to include all the relevant information and the names of the individuals concerned as it makes our investigations more thorough.
We will send an acknowledgement of your complaint within 7 working days of receiving it.
We will endeavour to give you a formal response when we acknowledge your complaint, however this is not always possible so we will give you an estimated timescale for our formal response with the acknowledgement; in the meantime we will keep you updated during the process.
If, having received our formal response, you do not feel your complaint has been appropriately dealt with, you can contact the Practice Manager, explain why you are not satisfied and ask for a review of our findings. The Practice Manager will look at the circumstances again and if it is felt that further investigation is warranted, we will instigate this.
If it is not felt that further investigation is warranted, the Practice Manager will inform you.
Members of the public wishing to make a complaint to the commissioner of a primary care service can contact NHS Cheshire and Merseyside by:
Telephone: 0800 132 996
E-mail: enquiries@cheshireandmerseyside.nhs.uk
Writing to us at: Patient Experience Team, No 1 Lakeside, 920 Centre Park Square, Warrington, WA11QY.
At the end of the process, if you are still not satisfied, you have recourse to contact the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman as follows:
Tel: 0345 015 4033
Fax: 0300 016 4000
e-mail: phso.enquiries@ombudsman.org.uk
Via website: www.ombudsman.org.uk
By post:
The Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman
Millbank Tower
Millbank
London
SW1P 4QP
Hungerford Medical Centre
School Crescent, Crewe, Cheshire, CW1 5HA
This privacy notice lets you know what happens to any personal data that you give to us, or any that we may collect from or about you.
This privacy notice applies to your personal information processed by or on behalf of the practice.
The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) came into force on 25th May 2018. This is a new regulation about the protection of any confidential and sensitive information.
This Notice explains how we collect and process your personal data and how we meet our obligations to you.
As your registered GP practice, we are the data controller for any personal data that we hold about you.
We are committed to protecting your privacy and will only use information collected lawfully in accordance with:
When you register with Hungerford Medical Centre we must collect basic ‘personal data’ about you. This includes your name, address, contact details such as email and mobile. We may also ask you for health information, ethnicity, sex, and religious beliefs. This type of information is called ‘Special data’. We are required to do this to ensure your healthcare information is linked between other healthcare providers.
We will collect the following types of information from you or about you from a third party for example a hospital that help in the delivery of your care:
The NHS Act 2006 and the Health and Social Care Act 2012 tell us that Practices need to promote and provide the health services in England, improve quality of services, reduce inequalities, conduct research, review performance of services and deliver education and training.
To provide your care, we need to collect and keep information about you and your health on our clinical records. Your records are used to:
We also may use or share your information for the following purposes:
The health care professionals who provide you with care must maintain records about your health and any treatment or care you have received previously. This maybe at another GP Surgery or at a hospital. These records help to provide you with the best possible healthcare.
NHS health records may be electronic, on paper or a mixture of both. We use several ways of working and with computerised systems this helps to ensure that your information is kept confidential and secure.
We need to know your personal, sensitive, and confidential data so that we can provide you with healthcare services as a General Practice. Under the new rules called General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) there are different reason why we may process your data, we mostly rely upon.
Personal data:
Article 6.1(e) Processing is necessary for the performance of a task carried out in the public interest or in the exercise of official authority vested in the controller.
For personal data including special category (health) data:
Article 9.2(h) Processing is necessary for the purposes of preventive or occupational medicine, for the assessment of the working capacity of the employee, medical diagnosis, the provision of health or social care systems and services on the basis of Union or Member State law or pursuant to contract with a health professional and subject to the conditions and safeguards referred to in paragraph 3.
We will also be using your data within the following regulations:
Every member of staff who works for an NHS organisation has a legal obligation to keep information about you confidential. We maintain our duty of confidentiality by conducting annual training and awareness, ensuring access to personal data is limited to the appropriate staff and information is only shared with organisations and individuals that have a legitimate and legal basis for access.
We will only ever use or pass on information about you if others involved in your care have a genuine need for it.
We will not disclose your information to any third party without your permission unless there are exceptional circumstances, or where the law requires information to be passed on, for example:
Our practice policy is to respect the privacy of our patients, their families, and our staff and to maintain compliance with the General Data Protection Regulations (GDPR) and all UK specific Data Protection Requirements. Our policy is to ensure all personal data related to our patients will be protected.
All employees and subcontractors who work with our practice are asked to sign a confidentiality agreement. The practice will, if required, sign a separate confidentiality agreement if necessary.
All the personal data we hold about you is processed in the UK.
Your information will be collected either electronically using secure NHS Mail or a secure electronic record transferred over an NHS encrypted network connection. In addition, physical information will be sent to your practice. This information will be retained within your GP’s electronic patient record or within your physical medical records.
We may use your name, contact details, and email address to inform you of services that may benefit you, with your consent only. There may be occasions where you will be asked if would like you to take part in innovations, research, improving services or identifying trends. We will always ask for your consent before we do this, and you can choose to opt out at any stage.
We may also share your information, subject to strict agreements on how it will be used, with the following organisations.
Your information will only be shared if it is for the provision of your care or required for our statutory function and legal obligations.
When we use a third-party service provider to process data on our behalf, we will always have an appropriate agreement in place to ensure that they keep the data secure, that they do not use or share information other than in accordance with our instructions and that they are operating appropriately.
An example of functions that may be carried out by third parties includes:
The safety and availability of your data is our utmost concern, and we are confident that this approach will improve data security, integrity, and performance.
Health Risk Screening or Risk Stratification is a process that helps your GP to determine whether you are at risk of an unplanned admission or deterioration in health. By using selected information such as age, gender, NHS number, diagnosis, existing long-term condition(s), medication history, patterns of hospital attendances, admissions, and periods of access to community care your GP will be able to judge if you are likely to need more support and care from time to time, or if the right services are in place to support the local population’s needs.
To summarise Risk Stratification is used in the NHS to:
Your GP may use computer-based calculations to identify if you are at risk, with support from the local Commissioning Support Unit.
Your GP will conduct this process outside of your GP appointment. This process is conducted electronically and without human intervention. The resulting report is reviewed by a healthcare team of staff within the Practice. This may result in contact being made with you if alterations to the provision of your care are identified.
The Secretary of State for Health and Social Care has granted permission for personal data to be used for the purposes of risk stratification; this is because it would take too long to carry out a manual review of all patients. You have the right to object to your information being used in this way.
The Practice may conduct Medicines Management Reviews of medications prescribed to its patients. This service performs a review of prescribed medications to ensure patients receive the most appropriate, up to date and cost-effective treatments.
If you decide to object to this, you should be aware that this may have a negative impact on the timely provision of your direct care. Should you wish to object please contact the Practice Manager.
This practice may undertake accredited research projects. Where this involves accessing or disclosing identifiable patient information, we will only do so with your explicit consent and with approval from the Research Ethics Committee or where we have been provided with special authority to do so without consent.
More information can be found at: https://www.gov.uk/topic/population-screening-programmes
This practice contributes to national and internal clinical audits so that healthcare can be checked and reviewed.
NHS England have also created a Summary Care Record which contains information about medication you are taking, allergies you suffer from and any bad reactions to medication that you have had in the past.
The shared record means patients do not have to repeat their medical history at every care setting.
Your record will be automatically setup to be shared with the organisations listed above, however you have the right to ask your GP to stop your record from being shared or only allow access to parts of your record.
Your electronic health record contains lots of information about you. In most cases, particularly for patients with complex conditions and care arrangements, this means that you get the best care and means that the person involved in your care has all the information about you. The shared record means patients do not have to repeat their medical history at every care setting.
You have the right to withdraw your consent at any time for any instance of processing, provided consent is the legal basis for the processing. Please contact your GP Practice for further information and to raise your objection.
You have a choice about whether you want your confidential patient information to be used in this way. If you are happy with this use of information you do not need to do anything. If you do choose to opt out your confidential patient information will still be used to support your individual care.
Health and care organisations now have until July 2022 to put systems and processes in place so they can be compliant with the national data opt-out and apply your choice to any confidential patient information they use or share for purposes beyond your individual care. Our organisation is working towards compliance with the national data opt-out policy.
To find out more or to register your choice to opt out, please visit www.nhs.uk/your-nhs-data-matters or telephone 0300 3035678.
On the webpage you will:
You can also find out more about how patient information is used at:
https://www.hra.nhs.uk/information-about-patients/ (which covers health and care research).
https://understandingpatientdata.org.uk/what-you-need-know (which covers how and why patient information is used, the safeguards and how decisions are made)
You can change your mind about your choice at any time.
Data being used or shared for purposes beyond individual care does not include your data being shared with insurance companies or used for marketing purposes and data would only be used in this way with your specific agreement.
The NHS Records Management Code of Practice 2021 identifies will replace the 2016 version. specific retention periods which are listed in Appendix II: Retention Schedule.
Please see https://www.nhsx.nhs.uk/information-governance/guidance/records-management-code/records-management-code-of-practice-2021/ for a copy of the 2021 NHS retention period policy.
The General Data Protection Regulations allows you to find out what information is held about you including information held within your medical records, either in electronic or physical format. This is known as a ‘Subject Access Request ‘
You also have the right to have it amended should it be inaccurate this is called:
To request access to your information, you need to do the following:
You should be aware that some details in your health records may not be able to be given to you. This will be in the interests of your wellbeing or to protect the identity of a third party. This decision will be made by your GP who is legally obligated to withhold parts of your medical records if they deem it in yours or a third party’s interest to do so.
In Summer 2022, patients with online access to their medical records will be able to have access to their future full medical records, including free texts, letters, and documents once they have been reviewed and filed by the GP. This will not affect proxy access.
There will be limited legitimate reasons why access to prospective medical records will not be given or will be reduced and they are based on safeguarding. If the release of information is likely to cause serious harm to the physical or mental health of the patient or another individual, the GP is allowed to refuse or reduce access to prospective records; third party information may also not be disclosed if deemed necessary. On occasion, it may be necessary for a patient to be reviewed before access is granted, if access can be given without a risk of serious harm.
What should you do if your personal information changes?
It is important that you tell the person treating you if any of your details such as your name or address have changed or if any of your details such as date of birth is incorrect for this to be amended. You have a responsibility to inform us as soon as possible of any changes so our records are accurate and up to date for you.
Should you have any concerns about how your information is managed at the GP practice please contact the Practice Manager. If you are still unhappy following a review by the GP practice, you have a right to lodge a complaint with the Information Commissioner.
Information Commissioner:
Wycliffe house
Water Lane
Wilmslow
Cheshire
SK9 5AF
Tel: 01625 545745
www.informationcommissioner.gov.uk
If you are happy for your data to be extracted and used for the purposes described in this privacy notice, then you do not need to do anything. If you have any concerns about how your data is shared, then please contact the Practice Data Protection Officer.
If you would like to know more about your rights in respect of the personal data we hold about you, please contact the Data Protection Officer as below.
Data Protection Officer:
The Practice Data Protection Officer is Sharon Forrester-Wild.
Any queries about Data Protection issues should be addressed to:
DPO.healthcare@nhs.net or 01270 275217
Changes:
It is important to point out that we may amend this Privacy Notice from time to time. If you are dissatisfied with any aspect of our Privacy Notice, please contact the Practice Manager or Data Protection Officer.
All GP Practices are required to declare the mean earnings (e.g. average pay) for GP’s working to deliver NHS services to patients at each Practice.
The average pay for GP’s working in Hungerford Medical Centre in the last financial year was £82,743 before Tax and National Insurance. This is for 0 full-time GP’s, 7 part-time GP s and 0 locum GP’s who worked in the Practice for more than six months.