Transforming Primary Care

National Contract changes are transforming General Practice

When you now contact us, our team of care Navigators and Navigators in training will ask a few more questions to assess the urgency of your needs.

Following this assessment, you will be signposted to the most relevant member of our multi-disciplinary team to deal with your concerns. This includes our Community Pharmacists, Practice Pharmacists, and Community eye services, Practice Nurses, Prescribing Nurse practitioner, Mental Health Nurses, physiotherapists, Care coordinators, GPs and GP access hubs.

For clinically urgent concerns, an appointment will be offered within one working day, depending on availability. Where an urgent concern arises and we are unable to offer an appointment within this time frame, our Care Navigators will direct you to alternative urgent care providers such as 111, urgent care centres or A&E.

Non-urgent needs:

if the concerns are assessed as non-urgent clinically but require a telephone or face-to-face appointment, we will schedule this within two weeks or you will continue to have the option to contact us via the E-consult function on our website.

If you cannot contact us or when your GP practice is closed:

    • Life-threatening emergency or serious injury: call 999 or go to your nearest Emergency Department (A&E)

    • If you are unwell and need medical help: visit NHS 111 online or call 111

    • For expert advice and medicines: visit your local pharmacy

    • Mental health emergency: visit NHS 111 online or contact the Oxleas crisis line on 0800 330  8590

What NHS 111 cannot do:

    • Issue fit notes. You need to contact your GP for these

    • Make or cancel appointments for you in other parts of the NHS

Other ways to contact NHS 111:

    • If you need help in other languages, call 111 and ask for an interpreter or

We hope that the above will increase capacity in terms of the numbers of patients we are able to help and improve your access to care.

Transformation takes time, please be patient. We appreciate your help and support in this transition.

GP Net Earnings

All GP practices are required to declare the mean earnings (e.g. average) for GPs working to deliver NHS services to patients at each practice.

The average pay for GPs working in Manor Brook Medical Centre in the last financial year (2023-24) was £33,499 before tax and
National Insurance. This is for  8  part time GPs and 4 locum GPs who worked in the practice for more than six months

Car Parking and Disabled Access

Car Parking

There are a limited number of parking spaces in the car park at the rear of the building. We ask you to respect the reserved parking for medical staff and the disabled driver spaces. There is also free parking available in surrounding areas.

Disabled Access

The centre has disabled access, designated disabled parking bays and disabled toilet facilities. Please do not hesitate to let us know if you have any special difficulties or requirements when visiting the centre.

Zero Tolerance

A zero tolerance policy to violent, threatening and abusive behaviour is now in place throughout the National Health Service. The staff in this practice have the right to do their work in an environment free from such behaviour and everything will be done to protect that right.

At no time will any violent, threatening or abusive behaviour be tolerated in this practice.

Training Practice

As we are a training practice you may be offered an appointment with a GP registrar who is a fully qualified doctor. These doctors spend either six or twelve months with us before finding their own practice or returning to hospital work.

Medical students, who are not yet qualified, occasionally sit in during consultations with your GP or nurse or they may see you separately prior to your consultation. You will be informed by the receptionist when a medical student is with your GP. Please inform the receptionist if you would prefer a student not to be present during your consultation.

Privacy Notice

Manor Brook Medical Centre uses personal and confidential information for a number of purposes. Our privacy notice provides a summary of how we use your information.

We are committed to protecting your privacy and will only use information collected lawfully in accordance with existing laws and with guidance from organisations that govern the provision of healthcare in England such as the Department of Health and the General Medical Council.

Our privacy notice will explain about how we will use and protect any information about you that you give us. Please click here for more information

 

Practice Philosophy

The practice team at Manor Brook Medical Centre are committed to providing the highest standards of primary care. We believe that general practice is the best place to receive medical attention for all patients throughout their lifetime.

In our privileged position as a general practice we have access to comprehensive medical records and feel we are able to know both you and your family well. We believe that all patients should have equal access to all our services.

We encourage our patients to consult the same doctor when possible for continuity of care.

Non NHS Examinations and Services

Medical examinations for special purposes, eg. elderly driver, insurance, HGV, pre-employment, fitness to undertake sport/travel can be provided by special arrangement.

Please contact the reception for further details. Please bring the form to reception for completion by GP.  Completing the form and private medical examinations are a chargeable service

There is a charge for these services – please check with the receptionist when you book. The list of Non-NHS fees can be found below.

Fees for GP services

COVID-19 and your information

Supplementary privacy note on COVID-19 for patients

This notice describes how we may use your information to protect you and others during the COVID-19 outbreak. It supplements our main privacy notice.

The health and social care system is facing significant pressures due to the COVID-19 outbreak. Health and care information is essential to deliver care to individuals, to support health and social care services and to protect public health. Information will also be vital in researching, monitoring, tracking and managing the outbreak. In the current emergency it has become even more important to share health and care information across relevant organisations.

Existing law which allows confidential patient information to be used and shared appropriately and lawfully in a public health emergency is being used during this outbreak. Using this law, the Secretary of State has required NHS Digital; NHS England and Improvement; Arm’s Length Bodies (such as Public Health England); local authorities; health organisations and GPs to share confidential patient information to respond to the COVID-19 outbreak. Any information used or shared during the COVID-19 outbreak will be limited to the period of the outbreak unless there is another legal basis to use the data. Further information is available on gov.uk and some FAQs on this law are also available on the NHSX website.

During this period of emergency, opt-outs will not generally apply to the data used to support the COVID-19 outbreak, due to the public interest in sharing information. This includes National Data Opt-outs. However, in relation to the Summary Care Record, existing choices will be respected. Where data is used and shared under these laws your right to have personal data erased will also not apply. It may also take us longer to respond to Subject Access Requests, Freedom of Information requests and new opt-out requests whilst we focus our efforts on responding to the outbreak.

In order to look after your health and care needs, we may share your confidential patient information including health and care records with clinical and non-clinical staff in other health and care providers, for example neighbouring GP practices, hospitals and NHS 111. We may also use the details we have to send public health messages to you, either by phone, text or email.

During this period of emergency, we may offer you a consultation via telephone or video conferencing. By accepting the invitation and entering the consultation you are consenting to this. Your personal/confidential patient information will be safeguarded in the same way it would with any other consultation.

We will also be required to share personal/confidential patient information with health and care organisations and other bodies engaged in disease surveillance for the purposes of protecting public health, providing healthcare services to the public and monitoring and managing the outbreak. Further information is available about how health and care data is being used and shared by other NHS and social care organisations in a variety of ways to support the COVID-19 response.

NHS England and Improvement and NHSX have developed a single, secure store to gather data from across the health and care system to inform the COVID-19 response. This includes data already collected by NHS England, NHS Improvement, Public Health England and NHS Digital. New data will include 999 call data, data about hospital occupancy and A&E capacity data as well as data provided by patients themselves. All the data held in the platform is subject to strict controls that meet the requirements of data protection legislation.

In such circumstances where you tell us you’re experiencing COVID-19 symptoms we may need to collect specific health data about you. Where we need to do so, we will not collect more information than we require, and we will ensure that any information collected is treated with the appropriate safeguards.

We may amend this privacy notice at any time so please review it frequently. The date at the top of this page will be amended each time this notice is updated.

Continuation of Treatment Initiated Privately

Patients occasionally request NHS prescriptions for treatment that has been recommended following a private consultation.

In certain cases it may be appropriate to prescribe your medication as a NHS prescription, but the South East London prescribing policy that is applied to all our NHS prescriptions will be followed.

This policy is to ensure that the patient receives the best care by the most appropriate and safe means.

If your consultant prescribes a medication that falls outside a licensed indication or is outside the local recommendations on prescribing, your consultant will need to provide you with a private prescription, which you will be able to take to any community pharmacy for dispensing.

You will have to pay a charge for the medicines on this prescription even if you are normally exempt. This only happens on a few occasions, but it is in your interest that you are aware of this possibility before a private consultation.

NHS doctors are under no obligation to continue any medicine initiated privately. When a GP prescribes a medicine, they take responsibility for that treatment and as such need to ensure a process for follow up and monitoring.

This is not always possible if the patient is seen by a consultant privately. Especially if there is limited follow up or the condition is not one that the GP has extensive experience in treating.