Vinay
Vinay was diagnosed with a urinary infection but, when the pain continued, he found it hard to get tests done because of confusion over where he was registered. He went to see a GP several times in his home and university cities, as well as to A&E. Calcium deposits and kidney stones had been causing the pain.
Vinay rarely saw the GP as a child as he was usually healthy. More recently, he had lower back pain while at university, which involved toing and froing quite a bit’ between different surgeries in his home and university cities.
The pain started after Vinay finished his undergraduate degree and went back home for the summer. He was diagnosed with a urinary infection but, when the pain continued, he found it hard to get tests done because of confusion over where he was registered. He went to see a GP several times in his home and university cities, as well as to A&E. He had pain around the lower back and sometimes his chest, and found it increasingly difficult to sleep.
Vinay encountered lots of problems trying to have a sonogram arranged (an ultrasound that helps doctors diagnose and treat medical conditions). The GP in his university city felt that it should be arranged by the GP in his home city as he’d been registered there. The GP in his home city said the scans should be done in the university city where he was living. When he finally got the scans done after re-registering at the university city, the test results revealed no problem. As the pain continued, he saw an urologist in his home city, who finally referred him for another sonogram. The results showed that calcium deposits and kidney stones had been causing the pain, some of which had passed through his system.
It took several months for Vinay to be diagnosed, during which time he had a lot of pain and no explanation or no one offering to do anything’. He also had to travel on a train to go to another city to go get checked out, to be told the same thing, to go back to… Another city’.
Around the time of interview, Vinay had been seeing the university mental health advisor because of low mood and anxiety. He found it helpful having someone to vent to’ and hoped to continue seeing her after the summer holidays. He was also trying to keep as positive as possible’.
For Vinay, improving health care was all about sympathy’. He felt that health professionals should be welcoming and reassuring but understood the tremendous pressure on GPs to meet targets. In terms of mental health, Vinay encouraged young people to channel their emotion and their feelings into some creative outlet or even some physical outlet, like a sport’.