Certain small surgical operations can be performed at the surgery.
With minor surgery the recovery time is usually short and you will be back to your usual activities fairly quickly (depending on your procedure).
Before attending for minor surgery you will need to see a doctor for the diagnosis and then you will be given an appointment to attend for your procedure.
Digital Champion
A Digital Champion is…
Our digital champion is Irene.
Someone who helps people use the internet to manage their health and wellbeing. A colleague or volunteer. A person who likes helping others. Not necessarily an IT whizz!
Your digital champion is there to help you understand and overcome any barriers to managing your health online.
With good digital skills you can
Order prescriptions and book appointments quickly and easily.
Find information to aid your health and wellbeing.
Discover local support groups.
Keep in touch with friends and family when in hospital.
DUTY DOCTOR SERVICE – FOR WHEN YOU HAVE AN URGENT MEDICAL PROBLEM
Available 8am – 6.30pm MONDAY – FRIDAY (excluding bank holidays)
Phone the surgery and explain to reception that you have an urgent problem
2. Reception will ask the nature of your problem and can then put you on the Duty Doctor list
3. The Duty Doctor will ring you back within 2 hours
4. The Duty Doctor will decide with you what you need, which could be:
· Advice over the phone
· An appointment at the surgery
· A home visit if you are really not well
· A referral to another service
This service offers you quick access to your GP practice, where they know you and have your full medical record. We recommend this service instead of going to A&E at the hospital.
Social Prescribing Services
There are many things that impact our health and wellbeing, including feeling isolated or struggling with practical challenges. We have Social Prescribers in our practice who can speak with adults registered with the practice. They will ask you about what is happening in your life, what you enjoy, and what is getting in the way. The Social Prescriber might suggest services and activities that might help you or simply work with you to build your skills and confidence. They can tell you about community-based services, e.g. lunch clubs, gardening groups, benefits advice, exercise groups. Please ask your GP to refer you to social prescribing.
Keep your baby’s immunisations and developmental checks up to date by bringing your baby to baby clinic. We run a baby clinic once a week:
On Tuesdays, cliic we operate a booked clinic for 6 week checks and routine childhood immunisations.
Non-urgent advice:
Please do not bring babies with infections to this clinic.
Travel Health Services
Lower Clapton General Practice Travel Health Services
We offer a full NHS travel service at LCGP. Below are all of the details you need to know about our travel health services and how to access them.
Our clinics
We offer travel clinics once every 2 weeks, these clinics are always in the morning between 10am – 1pm and appointments are available up to 4 weeks in advance.
To ensure you are fully protected before you travel we ask you to book your appointment as early as you can in advance of your travels – this must be at least 4 weeks before you travel. If we are unable to book you an appointment within this timeframe you will be directed to our local pharmacies to access private travel services.
Please note our clinics get booked up very quickly so we would advise you to contact us well in advance of your trip.
Booking a travel appointment
To book an appointment please use our ask my GP service available through our website or via this link Anima.
The nursing team who provide our travel health clinics have undergone specialist training to provide this service. It is therefore very important that you let our reception team know you want to book a travel health appointment, to ensure you see the right team. If you are booked in to the wrong clinic the appointment will need to be cancelled and re-booked but only if appointments are available, if we are fully booked this may mean you will need to access private travel services. Please do NOT book an appointment with a GP to discuss travel as they are unable to provide travel health services.
To ensure we provide safe travel health advice our reception team will ask you the details of all of the places you will be visiting during your travels, when you are going and how long you will be away.
What happens at the appointment
We provide a full risk assessment for travel, this includes general travel health advice, advice on and administration of NHS travel vaccinations (please see the full list of vaccinations available below), advice about additional private travel vaccinations that may be needed and advice around malaria prevention and other mosquito bourne illnesses.
Vaccinations
NHS Vaccines that we DO provide at LCGP
Private Vaccines that we DO NOT provide at LCGP
Hepatitis A
Hepatitis B
Typhoid
Meningitis ACWY
Diptheria, Tetanus, Polio
Rabies
Cholera
Japanese Encephalitis
Tick Bourne Encephalitis
Important points
We DO NOT provide travel advice over the telephone
If you would like to know what vaccinations we have for you on record you can check these on the immunisation section of the NHS app. Please note if you have received vaccinations through private travel services in the past these will NOT be available on the NHS app and you will need to contact the clinic directly.
Before your appointment please have a look at the information provided by the NHS UK Health Security Agency (NHS UKHSA) about your specific travel destination here.
Travel health questionnaire
To help us offer the best possible advice, you can complete this online form before coming to your appointment.
A blood test is when a sample of blood is taken for testing in a laboratory. Blood tests have a wide range of uses and are one of the most common types of medical test.
For example, a blood test can be used to:
assess your general state of health
confirm the presence of a bacterial or viral infection
see how well certain organs, such as the liver and kidneys, are functioning
A blood test usually involves someone taking a blood sample from a blood vessel in your arm. and the usual place for a sample is the inside of the elbow or the back of the hand, where the veins are relatively close to the surface.
Blood samples from children are taken at the Homerton Hospital and if your GP requests a blood test for your child you will be given advice about how to arrange the appointment.
You can find out more about blood tests, their purpose and the way they are performed on the NHS Choices website.