Peter
Annual check-ups are the main reason Peter goes to the GP, usually with his mum. He feels at ease with the two GPs he usually sees at the local surgery, and thinks that a good doctor is someone who is knowledgeable and able to make patients feel safe and relaxed.
Going to see the doctor felt like a good break from the daily routine when Peter was a child. He recalled seeing a middle aged GP (local doctor), who he thought was nice and comforting. He was less keen on receptionists, though, and found that the small building the surgery was located in was lacking in facilities. Peter changed surgeries when he moved house at the age of ten. The new one felt cleaner, better equipped and more spacious. Peter also felt that getting appointments was quicker and easier. Despite the more modern facilities, though, he found seeing the doctor a bit stressful because he worried about things that could go wrong’.
Annual check-ups are the main reason Peter goes to the GP, usually with his mum who fills out the forms or provides the parental signature when necessary. Peter finds the doctors considerate in addressing him and his mum but feels that it could be good for young people to see the GP on their own sometimes, without parents. He feels that it could be helpful if doctors occasionally asked parents to leave the room at the end of the consultation, allowing privacy for young people to discuss more sensitive topics, such as puberty.
Peter feels at ease with the two GPs he usually sees at the local surgery. For him, a good doctor is someone who is knowledgeable and able to make patients feel safe and relaxed. A doctor’s gender is unimportant, though Peter would feel more comfortable discussing certain problems with a male GP. Similarly, the doctor’s age is also irrelevant to Peter as long as they are qualified and confident. Young junior doctors and very old’ GPs, though, sometimes give Peter the impression that they’re confused, which makes him want to help them but can’t’.
Peter has been to a walk-in centre twice when he found it difficult to get an appointment at his local surgery. His experiences were positive both times, though he thinks that the appointments were rushed because the doctor had lots of patients to see. Peter feels that if you’ve gone there, out of your way, you feel that there’s something wrong’ but very short consultations can make people feel a bit discarded’.
Peter often looks up his symptoms on the Internet, mostly on the NHS website or Wikipedia, but finds face-face consultations more comforting. He also thinks it would be difficult to explain symptoms over the phone or in an email. Peter likes the idea of being able to access his medical records online he sees doctors writing a lot during consultations but thinks they rarely give sufficient explanation.
Overall Peter was satisfied with local healthcare services but would like to be able to get appointments easier. He understands, though, that his surgery doesn’t have enough doctors. He also thinks that the reception is under-staffed, which is why receptionists sometimes give him the impression that they don’t want you to be there’. A friendlier attitude would be helpful because everyone who’s going there is normally quite nervous themselves.
Peter advised young people not to be nervous about visiting the GP, to go there even if you think you don’t necessarily have to go there, just to make sure that everything’s OK’.