Payment for Private Services Will Now Be Required in Advance

Payment for Private Services Will Now Be Required in Advance (From Thursday 15th May 2025)

Our practice offers a range of services that fall outside of NHS coverage and therefore require a fee. Please note that payment is required in advance for all private services. All payments must be made in cash, and a receipt will be provided once payment has been received.

Please allow up to 8 weeks for the completion of these services, as NHS medical care remains our top priority and we are unable to expedite private work requests.

You can find the list of services and fees below:

List of Non-NHS Services and Fees:

Army Questionnaire – £50.00

Cancellation Holiday Form / Letter – £50.00

Childminder Forms (Ofsted) – £50.00

Letter for taking repeat medications on a plane – £50.00

Fitness to Fly Letter – £50.00

Fitness to Exercise Certificate – £50.00

Housing Letter – £50.00

Overseas Pension Form – £45.00

Metropolitan Police Form – £50.00

Power of Attorney Form – £80.00

Power of Attorney Form (with Home Visit) – £110.00

Private Letter / TWIMC – £50.00

Private Sick Certificate – £50.00

School Health Report – £50.00

Sickness / Accident / Travel Insurance Form – £50.00

Medical Assessments and Reports:

Fostering Medical (Form AH) – £76.24

Fostering Medical (Form AH2) – £24.36

HGV Licence Medical – £120.00

Claim Forms (all types) (Payable by Patient) – £50.00

Life Insurance Report (Payable by Insurance Company) – £150.00

Targeted Life Insurance Report (Payable by Insurance Company) – £130.00

Overseas Consultation (30 Minutes) – £70.00

Overseas Consultation (Follow-up) – £40.00

Pre-employment Medical (Including elderly driver fitness to drive) – £110.00

Sports Medical – £120.00

Taxi Medicals and Bus Medicals £120.00

Computerised or Manual Records requested by the patient (including Solicitors)  FREE

Vaccinations:

Hepatitis B (Single Dose) – £50.00

Hepatitis B (Triple Dose) £150.00

Rabies (Triple Dose)         £180.00

Rabies (Single Dose)        £60.00

Varicella ‘Chicken Pox’ (Single Dose) – Children    £50.00

✈️ Practice Policy: Diazepam Prescribing for Fear of Flying

Policy Statement

From 19th May 2025 Addington Road Surgery does not prescribe diazepam or other benzodiazepines for the purposes of flying, including flight-related anxiety (aerophobia). This decision is based on clinical safety, ethical prescribing standards, and national prescribing guidance.

Clinical Rationale

  1. BNF Contraindication: The British National Formulary (BNF), hosted by NICE, explicitly states that:
    “Phobic states” are a contraindication for benzodiazepines
    🔗 BNF Diazepam – NICE
    Fear of flying is classed as a phobic state, and thus benzodiazepines such as diazepam are not appropriate treatments.
  2. Safety Risks During Flights:
    o Diazepam can cause excessive sedation, impairing the ability to respond in emergencies.
    o It increases the risk of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) due to immobility and sedation.
    o It may result in paradoxical reactions such as agitation or aggression.
  3. Legal and Ethical Concerns:
    o Diazepam is a controlled drug and may be illegal or restricted in several countries.
    o Patients may be at risk of legal penalties or detention at international borders.
    o Prescribing a controlled drug for a non-licensed, non-clinical indication may violate GMC Good Medical Practice standards.

Alternative Management of Flight Anxiety

We recommend the following non-drug approaches:

Review & Exceptions

This policy will be reviewed annually. Exceptions will only be made under specialist care and with formal psychiatric assessment for complex anxiety disorders where benzodiazepines are clinically indicated.

Addington Road Management Team

Accessing someone else’s information

Accessing someone else’s information

As a parent, family member or carer, you may be able to access services for someone else. We call this having proxy access. We can set this up for you if you are both registered with us.

To requests proxy access:

  • collect a proxy access form from reception from 10am to 6pm

Linked profiles in your NHS account

Once proxy access is set up, you can access the other person’s profile in your NHS account, using the NHS App or website.

The NHS website has information about using linked profiles to access services for someone else.

General Data Protection Regulation

Zero Tolerance

The practice fully supports the NHS Zero Tolerance Policy. The aim of this policy is to tackle the increasing problem of violence against staff working in the NHS and ensures that doctors and their staff have a right to care for others without fear of being attacked or abused.

We understand that ill patients do not always act in a reasonable manner and will take this into consideration when trying to deal with a misunderstanding or complaint. We ask you to treat your doctors and their staff courteously and act reasonably.

All incidents will be followed up and you will be sent a formal warning after a second incident or removed from the practice list after a third incident if your behaviour has been unreasonable.

However, aggressive behaviour, be it violent or verbal abusive, will not be tolerated and may result in you being removed from the Practice list and, in extreme cases, the Police will be contacted if an incident is taking place and the patient is posing a threat to staff or other patients.

Removal from the Practice List

A good patient-doctor relationship, based on mutual respect and trust, is the cornerstone of good patient care. The removal of patients from our list is an exceptional and rare event and is a last resort in an impaired patient-practice relationship. When trust has irretrievably broken down, it is in the patient’s interest, just as much as that of The Surgery, that they should find a new practice. An exception to this is on immediate removal on the grounds of violence e.g. when the Police are involved.

Removing other members of the household

In rare cases, however, because of the possible need to visit patients at home it may be necessary to terminate responsibility for other members of the family or the entire household. The prospect of visiting patients where a relative who is no longer a patient of the practice by virtue of their unacceptable behaviour resides, or being regularly confronted by the removed patient, may make it too difficult for the practice to continue to look after the whole family. This is particularly likely where the patient has been removed because of violence or threatening behaviour and keeping the other family members could put doctors or their staff at risk.

Your Rights and Responsibilities

Patient’s Rights

We are committed to giving you the best possible service. This will be achieved by working together. Help us to help you. You have a right to, and the practice will try to ensure that:

  • You will be treated with courtesy and respect
  • You will be treated as a partner in the care and attention that you receive
  • All aspects of your visit will be dealt with in privacy and confidence
  • You will be seen by a doctor of your choice subject to availability
  • In an emergency, out of normal opening hours, if you telephone the practice you will be given the number to receive assistance, which will require no more than one further call
  • You can bring someone with you, however you may be asked to be seen on your own during the consultation
  • Repeat prescriptions will normally be available for collection within two working days of your request
  • Information about our services on offer will be made available to you by way of posters, notice boards and newsletters
  • You have the right to see your medical records or have a copy subject to certain laws.

Patient’s Responsibilities

With these rights come responsibilities and for patients we would respectfully request that you:

  • Treat practice staff and doctors with the same consideration and courtesy that you would like yourself. Remember that they are trying to help you
  • Please ensure that you order your repeat medication in plenty of time allowing 48 working hours.
  • Please ensure that you have a basic first aid kit at home and initiate minor illness and self-care for you and your family.
  • Please attend any specialist appointments that have been arranged for you or cancel them if your condition has resolved or you no longer wish to attend
  • Please follow up any test or investigations done for you with the person who has requested the investigation
  • Attend appointments on time and check in with Reception
  • Patients who are more than 20 minutes late for their appointment may not be seen.
  • If you are unable to make your appointment or no longer need it, please give the practice adequate notice that you wish to cancel. Appointments are heavily in demand and missed appointments waste time and delay more urgent patients receiving the treatment they need
  • An appointment is for one person only. Where another family member needs to be seen or discussed, another appointment should be made
  • Patients should make every effort to be present at the surgery to ensure the best use of nursing and medical time. Home visits should be medically justifiable and not requested for social convenience
  • Please inform us when you move home, change your name or telephone number, so that we can keep our records correct and up to date
  • Read the practice leaflets and other information that we give you. They are there to help you use our services. If you do not understand their content please tell us
  • Let us have your views. Your ideas and suggestions, whether complimentary or critical, are important in helping us to provide a first class, safe, friendly service in pleasant surroundings.

NHS Constitution

The NHS Constitution establishes the principles and values of the NHS in England. For more information see these websites:

Training Practice

The Surgery is an approved training practice for the training of General Practice Registrars (GPRs).

Being an approved training practice means that:

  • patients can directly contribute to the training of future GPs
  • patients who consult with the GPR will have longer consultations
  • it keeps all doctors and nurses keep in touch with new medical developments and skills
  • It improves all doctors and nurse’s consultation and training skills
  • It ensures that clinical standards and standards of medical record keeping are maintained
  • It helps with recruitment of high quality doctors to the practice for job vacancies

GPRs are doctors in training who are qualified doctors and have already worked in hospitals as junior doctors for at least 3 years and have now decided that they would like to specialise in General Practice.

In order to qualify as a GP all doctors have to complete Postgraduate Specialist Training which includes at least 18 months training in General Practice.

The practice will be regularly assessed for its suitability for postgraduate training in general practice. This process includes an inspection of medical records for quality, NOT content. If you object to your record being seen for this process then you must let us know in writing so these notes can be withdrawn.

An essential component of training in all medical practice is the use of video and consultations with the both the GPR and the trainer present. We hope that all our patients will be willing to take part in these educational consultations to help us all in improving and maintaining our medical and consultation skills. All video recordings are strictly confidential and are used for teaching only. We will not video your consultation without your consent. Please inform Reception if you would prefer not to participate.

Summary Care Records

About your Summary Care Record

Your Summary Care Record contains important information about any medicines you are taking, any allergies you suffer from and any bad reactions to medicines that you have previously experienced.

Allowing authorised healthcare staff to have access to this information will improve decision making by doctors and other healthcare professionals and has prevented mistakes being made when patients are being cared for in an emergency or when their GP practice is closed.

Your Summary Care Record also includes your name, address, date of birth and your unique NHS Number to help identify you correctly.

You may want to add other details about your care to your Summary Care Record. This will only happen if both you and your GP agree to do this. You should discuss your wishes with your GP practice.

Healthcare staff will have access to this information, so that they can provide safer care, whenever or wherever you need it, anywhere in England.

FAQs

Who can see my Summary Care Record?

Healthcare staff who have access to your Summary Care Record:

• need to be directly involved in caring for you
• need to have an NHS Smartcard with a chip and passcode
• will only see the information they need to do their job and
• will have their details recorded every time they look at your record

Healthcare staff will ask for your permission every time they need to look at your Summary Care Record. If they cannot ask you (for example if you are unconscious or otherwise unable to communicate), healthcare staff may look at your record without asking you, because they consider that this is in your best interest.

If they have to do this, this decision will be recorded and checked to ensure that the access was appropriate.

What are my choices?

You can choose to have a Summary Care Record or you can choose to opt out.

If you choose to have a Summary Care Record and are registered with a GP practice, you do not need to do anything as a Summary Care Record is created for you.

If you choose to opt out of having a Summary Care Record and do not want a SCR, you need to let your GP practice know by filling in and returning an opt-out form which can be optained from your GP practice.

If you are unsure if you have already opted out, you should talk to the staff at your GP practice.

You can change your mind at any time by simply informing your GP and they can create a Summary Care Record for you.

Children and the Summary Care Record

If you are the parent or guardian of a child under 16, you should make this information available to them and support the child to come to a decision as to whether to have a Summary Care Record or not.

If you believe that your child should opt-out of having a Summary Care Record, we strongly recommend that you discuss this with your child’s GP. This will allow your child’s GP to highlight the consequences of opting-out, prior to you finalising your decision.

Where can I get more information?

For more information about Summary Care Records you can:

• talk to the staff at your GP practice
• phone the Health and Social Care Information Centre on 0300 303 5678
• Read the Summary Care Record patient information

Suggestions, Comments and Complaints

We make every effort to give the best service possible to everyone who attends our practice.

In the majority of cases the best way to resolve your concerns as quickly as possible is with the front line staff or the service or organisation that you are complaining about.

However, we are aware that things can go wrong resulting in a patient feeling that they have a genuine cause for complaint. If this is so, we would wish for the matter to be settled as quickly, and as amicably, as possible.

Simply contact the Practice Manager preferably in writing via our  Contact Us page or by completing a complaints form available in surgery, and she/he will set all the necessary wheels in motion.

We are continually striving to improve our service. Any helpful suggestions would be much appreciated and a suggestion box is located in the waiting area.