Thank you all for your thoughts.
It's a strange one, sudden onset reflux like nothing I've ever had before, relentless acid even in my nose, ears and I had to keep brushing my teeth because it was in my burning my lips and gums.
Docs prescribed medication over the phone (it's £1 a tablet in the pharmacy or 56 on prescription), I was eventually seen months later by a GP with referred for an ultrasound, which again took weeks and came back fine. Next step is barium swallow which they won't authorise without speaking, nothing's changed it's just the next logical step bar an endoscopy.
It's not a 'new issue' so I can't do an emergency appointment and they've said they only deal with one issue per appointment to me in the past too. What if the issues are connected?
Anyway it's incredibly frustrating. I have muscular dystrophy so my muscles are basically dying and there's nothing I can do about it and I was just about holding on until I got this issue where I can't eat. You lose weight from you muscles first so time really is of the essence for me. I don't have the time to jump through the normal hoops.
I know the NHS is straining at the seams, facing cut after cut whilst governments award jobs to companies they're in bed with. The whole thing is screwed really but it is something we pay for and it should be fit for purpose. I wonder how many lives have been lost having to wait and wait and wait.
I think a lot of people will be in similar situations where they'd like to of had a GP appointment for existing issue(s) but have had to put it off due to lack of appointment availability in the current pandemic situation. If you're surgery has an online portal it's worth signing up for that as I can log in and request repeat prescriptions using that instead of trying to get through on the phone. It also seems more reliable to deal with the surgery direct rather than via the pharmacy, who seem to regularly mess things up or take longer to complete the whole process. Some appointments are also reserved for the online system or you can see what's available easier than going through reception. Best to book the appointment even if it is a few weeks out and if it gets any worse ramp up the insist-ency for an emergency appointment. Only you can judge whether the meds are not coping to keep things in check as to whether an emergency appointment is warranted or not. Maybe you could get a phone appointment where the GP rings you or failing that maybe try NHS direct.
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