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My resolutions – for others

13 Jan 2010

Copperfield has made no personal New Year's resolutions but has one or two ideas for charities, politicians... and his colleagues

To those who've called me foul-mouthed and doctor-centric in the past, I'd say this: you just don't see primary care from the GP's perspective, and that's the only one that counts, tossers. Which is why, this year, I haven't made any New Year's resolutions for myself – but I have a few suggestions for everyone else.

Pre-op assessment nurses. All you do is measure blood pressure and dipstick urine, yet you manage to screw both up. A slight blip in BP when you've just outlined the possible complications of an aneurysm repair does not constitute hypertension. And positive nitrites or whatever in an asymptomatic patient are of no interest to anyone, least of all to me and my prescription pad. Your New Year's resolution is to stop this nonsense and get a proper job.

Receptionists. Telling me there's a visit request at 6.29pm, inevitably involving the words ‘faecal' and ‘incontinence', is absolutely no reason to smile. From now on, when relaying this sort of message, adopt a suitably apologetic tone, and deliver it with tea.

Private health screeners. You can stop sending me pages of irrelevant crap about tests that should never have been done in the first place. And you can start following up any abnormalities yourself.

Psychiatrists. ‘Dear Dr Copperfield, your patient did not attend clinic today, so I've discharged him from the mental health services back to your care.' Brilliant – never mind that he DNA'd because he's convinced you're working for the CIA and is more in need of shrink care than ever. So stop exploiting your patients' pathology as a way of reducing the waiting lists.

Pharmacists. Look, snot is supposed to be green. Stop sending these patients to me for antibiotics when they actually just need a pack of tissues.

Charities. Stop coming up with dumb-ass initiatives such as telling punters that back pain is a likely sign of prostate cancer, or encouraging them to take their own pulse to detect AF. Whimsical ideas may get you publicity, but they also spoil my day by packing out the waiting room with the worried well.

Educationalists. Stop teaching communication skills to the exclusion of everything else, because we end up with doctors who are brilliant communicators but have nothing useful to say. And, for Chrissakes, shave those bloody beards off.

Community nurses. Stop taking CSUs because the urine ‘looks cloudy' or swabs because the wound ‘looks messy'. You may have time to waste, but I haven't and nor has the microbiology lab.

Opticians. Learn how to check blood sugars and blood pressures yourselves if you're so bloody good at suspecting diabetes and hypertension just by looking at someone's retina.

Macmillan nurses. Stop asking me to prescribe nutrition supplements to ‘build up' terminally ill patients. It's not sensible or possible: cancer is the ultimate miracle diet, it just doesn't know when to stop.

Consultants. Stop sending me copies of lab results of tests you've ordered. These aren't ‘for my information', as you claim, they're ‘for your convenience' because you're dumping them in my lap.

McVitie's. Stop making your packs of Hob Nobs so hard to get into – it's an emergency.

Politicians. Just stop.

Dr Tony Copperfield is a GP in Essex. You can email him at tony copperfield@hotmail.com

Copperfield

READERS' COMMENTS

Anonymous,
13 Jan 2010
Thanks for that, made me laugh out loud. Can be kind with comment as practice nurses not included. Doctors, stop whinging about how badly done by you are, try fulfilling your own QOF and pay your practice staff fair wages and finally make sure you buy and share those Hob Nobs. marie collier
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Anonymous,
14 Jan 2010
It was over breakfast in a local coffee shop that I realised the worst had happened. Everyone around me had been transformed into grey-haired, avuncular GPs. The waitress, now a kindly looking man in his 50s, struggled with the service, the chef screwed up his pinny, picked up a copy of his BNF and left - after-all cooking was someone else’s job. Outside, in the icy gloom the roads were ungritted, the GPs didn’t know the first thing about salt and an affectionate looking mechanic wearing a bow tie and a bemused expression scratched his head as he leafed through a copy of autorepair monthly. A policeman stood motionless in the snow, hat perched ineptly on his head and his useless stethoscope dangling like a skinned hide around his neck. GPs were on every street corner, clustering around stalls selling Pulse magazine and queuing for buses which never arrived, because the GPs didn’t know how to drive them. At last I got to work, I closed the door behind me and breathed a sigh of relief. I went to make a cuppa, hoping that this doctorcentric nightmare was just a figment of my imagination. To my horror it was quickly proven to be a reality; no-one had remembered to buy the f***ing tea! Kev
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