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Showing posts from July, 2012

Goodbye and Welcome!

We are a GP Training practice and regularly have doctors attached to us who are training to become GP's. In the practice there are three approved GP Trainers - Dr Brown, Dr Walsh and Dr Harding. Trainees are attached to the practice for either six or twelve months and change around at the start of August and February. Change over day this time is Wednesday, 1st August. We are saying goodbye to Dr Mirza (she is now fully qualified and going to do sessions at the Olympics), Dr Hilton (Kings Medical Practice was her first post on a three year GP training post and she is going to do Emergency Medicine at Leeds), Dr Towers (she will be entering her second year of training and is going to Pinderfields to do Paediatrics) and Dr Rafique (who is going to College Lane Surgery at Ackworth to complete his training). The doctors who are replacing them are; Dr Mo Sinha, Dr Prab Matharu, Dr Emma Barker and Dr Amina Vandu-Chikolo. We have more training doctors attached to us and just to comple

Have your say on local hospital changes

Mid Yorkshire Hospitals have this week announced a public consultation on changes to hospital services for people with eye problems, having orthopaedic surgery and needing neuro rehabilitation. The first set of proposals are to move services for patients with some eye conditions (glaucoma, medical retina problems and cataract services) from Pinderfields to Pontefract. Along with this the orthopaedic service would develop Pontefract hospital as the major centre for planned orthopaedic operations for patients in Wakefield, but patients would still be able to attend out patients at their local hospitals. A second set of proposals is to move a 12 bedded in patient neuro rehabilitation unit from Pinderfields to Dewsbury. The neuro rehabilitation services helps people who have had complex disabilities from diseases like stroke, brain injury or multiple sclerosis. You can find more details about the proposal and make comments during the consultation period by clicking here and following

Doxazosin - medication swap

We are just about to write to patients who are taking doxazosin to tell them that we are swapping the formulation of their medication. Doxazosin is a drug that is prescribed for mainly for controlling blood pressure and also sometimes for patients with prostate problems. It is used as a fourth line blood pressure lowering drug - that is after we have tried three others to control patients blood pressure. We are swapping the form of the drug from a modified release form to the immediate release form. Patients should notice no difference in the swap. According to our colleagues in medicines management the half life of the active drug in both the immediate release and modified release form is 22 hours, so both drugs are suitable to take once a day. The only difference patients might noticed is that the dose of the immediate release variety is half that of the modified release form. If you are taking 8mg modified release doxazosin the new dose of the immediate release form is 4mg. The

If you are going somewhere hot!

This is my first blog for nearly three weeks because I have been away on holiday. I have been to Sicily - we had a great time and we had blue skies and hot weather and of course I followed the 'Slip, Slop, Slap' message - 'slip on a shirt', 'slop on some sunscreen', and 'slap on a hat'. The practice provides a full travel advice service to our patients including travel vaccinations, travel health advice (Slip, Slop, Slap), advice about malaria prophylaxis and Yellow Fever vaccinations. Most travel vaccinations are free - the exceptions are generally if you are going to unusual places or doing something unusual e.g. back packing trips in the wilds or staying somewhere for longer than three months. The commonest vaccinations patients have to pay for are Yellow Fever, Hepatitis B and Rabies vaccinations. You will also have to pay for malaria tablets but the practice does not charge if you need a private prescription for malaria prophylaxis tablets. Th