Hannah
Hannah rarely goes to the GP but, when she does, she asks for an emergency appointment or goes because of her son. She has generally had a positive experience of GPs but finds appointments difficult to get and that the waiting list is sometimes very long. She feels quite comfortable with doctors and likes seeing one in particular who has known her and her family her whole life.
As a child Hannah rarely saw the GP. Now she is older, she asks for emergency appointments when she needs to see a doctor or take her son to the surgery. She sees the GP routinely for a repeat prescription for the contraceptive pill every six months.
Hannah has generally had a positive experience of seeing doctors, though finds waiting times for non-emergency appointments very frustrating, sometimes being up to four weeks. She feels that they have got much worse since her teens. Hannah makes appointments in person very early in the morning as she finds that she is more likely to get one that way than over the phone. When she used to phone to make emergency same-day appointments at 8am, she was sometimes told that they had all been booked as people had been queuing outside the surgery since 7:30am. On one occasion, after she failed to get an appointment for her son who had chickenpox, Hannah had to go to the walk-in centre. Because it was closing, though, she ended up having to go to A&E (Accident and Emergency).
Hannah feels quite comfortable with doctors as they are professionals, though felt judged a couple of times by the nurse/doctor when she has used off the shelf’ remedies. Hannah has one doctor who she prefers because he knows her whole family and she has been going to him for years. She feels he knows her well and empathises with her and her son’s health problems.
For Hannah, a good GP is understanding and empathetic. She advises doctors and receptionists to give more information and explanation to patients, including reasons why appointments are unavailable and why particular treatments are inappropriate.