Clinics we offer at our GP surgery

We provide a range of services and clinics.

The following clinics are available at our surgery by appointment:

  • Baby Immunisations
  • Blood pressure and urine checks
  • Cervical smears
  • Childhood immunisations
  • Chronic disease management
  • Cryotherapy
  • Family planning advice
  • Travel advice and vaccinations limited to Cholera, Hepatitis A, Typhoid and Polio
  • Skin Surgery
  • Removal of stitches
Patients who live more than one mile from a chemist may have their prescriptions dispensed at the surgery. The health service regulations on this matter are very strict and this service can be offered only to those patients who register as dispensing patients when they join the practice or when they move house.
We hold weekday and Saturday morning clinics every Autumn and where advised in the Spring at the Fakenham Surgery.

Dates are announced well in advance and advertised in the surgery, on the website, and in surgery notes.

Once we have received our flu vaccinations, patients eligible for a free flu vaccination can request a vaccination at reception and a practice nurse will administer the vaccination at the earliest opportunity (Please note this may involve a short wait) or sign up to one of our flu clinics.
Minor surgery is offered, including removal of moles and cysts, joint injections, cryotherapy, in our fully equipped minor surgery room.
If you would like advice and support on quitting smoking, please contact Smokefree Norfolk on 0800 0854 113 or visit their website at www.smokefreenorfolk.nhs.uk
We provide a full range of contraceptive services including coil fitting and implants.

Once you are established with your chosen contraceptive method, follow-up can be undertaken at our nurse-run contraceptive clinic.

We are happy to discuss the risks and benefits of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and advice can be given either by one of our nurses or your own doctor.

Our nurses are also skilled at taking cervical smears and can offer a well woman check if required.
– Free condoms, and the C-card scheme run by nurses.

– First and ongoing prescription for contraceptive pill, combined pill and progesterone only pill.

– Prescription for contraceptive injection – given by the Nurses.

– Free fitting of both the copper and Mirena coil and Implanon (contraceptive implant).

– All contraceptives are provided free of charge.

– Morning after pill -this ideally needs to be taken within 24 hours of having unprotected sex but can be taken up to 5 days after sex, however it becomes less effective the longer you leave it!

– Access to a doctor who can refer you to abortion/pregnancy advice services.

– Advice on all health issues.

– Healthy eating advice and weight management.

Chargeable Services

We offer various services that are not covered by the NHS, consequently, they attract a charge.

This includes certificates, forms, medical examinations and various travel vaccinations.

  • Please contact reception for information on fees payable on our chargeable services.

Why does my doctor charge fees?

When your doctor is asked to give medical information about you in the form of a report, letter or certificate, the request kick starts a series of processes.

This takes time and is not always straightforward or simple to complete. Some of the information is not available easily and will mean the doctor has to sort and select the right information for the request.

The doctor also must establish who is funding this work and if it is not part of their NHS work, agree a fee for this.

Many patients see their doctor as the embodiment of the NHS and all that it provides – free care at the point of delivery. However not all work doctors are asked to do is paid for by the NHS and many GPs are self-employed.

This means they must cover their time and costs – staff, buildings, heating, lighting, etc – in the same way as any small business. The NHS only pays for NHS work, any work outside of the NHS must be funded by other means and this is why fees are charged.

Your doctor receives large amounts of request and which is often to do with whether your general health allows you to do something e.g. to work, receive benefits, drive, play sport, attend school, own a house, a firearm or it is for insurance, court or other medico-legal reasons.

All requests will vary in complexity, volume and consistency ranging from signing a certificate which can take minutes, to an in-depth report with an examination that can take hours.

When your doctor signs a certificate or completes a report, it is a condition of remaining on the Medical Register that they only sign what they know to be true.

In order to complete even the simplest of forms, they may have to check your entire medical record (some of which may not be accessible on a computer or on site).

Carelessness or an inaccurate report can have serious consequences for the doctor with the General Medical Council (the doctors’ regulatory body) or even the Police.

Your doctor is inundated with work. They have to balance their time with treating the sick, keeping their practice afloat and making sure they are doing all of this safely and within their professional duties as a doctor.

With certain exceptions written within their contract, doctors do not have to carry out non-NHS work. However, many choose to for the benefit of you and other families they treat.

Where a doctor chooses to undertake the work, we advise them to inform and always agree a fee in advance of undertaking work.

Should their volume of work prove to be greater or more complex than expected, the doctor will contact you to discuss how to proceed.

– Not all documents need a signature by a doctor and can be done by other professionals. Please check the form and accompanying guidance as you may get a quicker response that way.

– If you have several forms requiring completion, present them all at once and ask your doctor if he or she is prepared to complete them at the same time to speed up the process.

– Do not expect your GP to process forms overnight. Urgent requests may mean that a doctor has to make special arrangements to process the form quickly, and this will cost more.

– Don’t book an appointment with your doctor to complete forms without checking with your doctor’s administrative staff as to whether you need to or not.