Still a bit grumpy this week, sorry. Dunno why. Unfortunately, the grumps weren’t helped earlier by remembering the experience of LB’s epilepsy diagnosis last year.
I won’t go over the whole sorry, sad story but just focus on a tiny part of it. The GP. Just to illustrate the layers and layers of crap and nonsense that parents of disabled children (and others) are subjected to.
LB was discharged by paediatric neurology after investigations into some absent type seizures he’d had. They said he needed to learn to manage his anxiety.
Next thing, I get a call from his deputy head teacher, while I was at work. She passed the phone over to the paramedic who reassured me that LB was now conscious after full tonic clonic seizure but on his way to A&E in the ambulance….
Surely pretty high up on ‘parents’ worst nightmare’ scale?
He was discharged after six hours in A&E and the next day I rang the (random) GP and filled her in with what had happened.
“..so I wondered if you could re-refer LB to neurology?”
“Well you’ll have to bring him in for an appointment..”
“Why?”
“Well I need to see him before I can make a referral.”
“Why can’t you just refer him?…He gets very stressed at the doctors and has obviously just had a pretty stressful experience.”
“Well I need to see him before I can make a referral.”
“Why? Why do you need to see him? I don’t understand. What is seeing him going to do?”
“I need to take his blood pressure.”
“WHAAAAA???? Whaddayamean????? He was in A&E for six hours yesterday having everything checked. WHY DO YOU NEED TO CHECK HIS BLOOD PRESSURE???”
“I’m sorry Ms Sarasiobhan, but I cannot make a referral without seeing the patient. It would not be accepted by the practice.”
“Are you listening to anything I’ve been saying? He had a referral to neurology, after being seen by the GP six months ago. He spent 6 hours in A&E yesterday after a huge seizure. Why can’t you just write the letter???”
“If I was to write the letter not having seen him, I’m afraid I would be lying. And I’m not prepared to lie.”
“Don’t lie!!! Just say what happened. He shouldn’t have been released in the first place without proper investigations, he needs to get back there ASAP. Why can’t you just make the referral?????”
Sniff. “Well, I’ll write the letter but I’ll have to phrase it in a particular way. I don’t think it will work.”
Four weeks later we get a letter from the hospital saying that LB had turned 16 since the original referral. He needed to be re-referred by the GP to adult neurology.
Grumpy? I dunno.