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This is a question Corporate Idiocy

Comedian Al Murray recounts a run-in with industrial-scale stupidity: "Car insurance company rang, without having sent me a renewal letter, asking for money. Made them answer security questions." In the same vein, tell us your stories about pointless paperwork and corporate quarter-wits

(, Thu 23 Feb 2012, 12:13)
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Was the scheme something along the lines
of enabling you to collect your medication from the surgery, rather than a pharmacy?
If so, that probably would make things easier for a lot of people (your unique travel arrangements notwithstanding).

Also, local arrangements created by GP practices are most likely not NHS decisions, what the GP practices being private enterprises.
(, Mon 27 Feb 2012, 10:33, 1 reply)

No, just the piece of paper. I'd still have to go to pharmacy. Essentially they were removing my ability to call them and say 'I need drugs', replacing it with me going into the surgery and saying 'I need drugs'.
(, Mon 27 Feb 2012, 11:00, closed)
Ah.
In which case, they're bloody stupid. That said, there does seem to be a drive towards making it harder to get things on repeat. Probably hoping that we'll save them some cash by dying off.
(, Mon 27 Feb 2012, 11:05, closed)
My surgery has just put in some online system
which allows you to request repeats, and they be sent directly to the local pharmacy of your choice within 48hrs. As the local Tesco has a pharmacy open until 10pm I consider this to be full of win.
(, Mon 27 Feb 2012, 11:15, closed)
I don't see why for a small charge you can't have them posted out to the addressed registered with your GP

And I totally agree with the sentiment that the government proposals for reform are madness. Reform does need to be made, but the problem I have is that I consider GPs to be the WORST bit of the NHS. They act as gate keepers to the services you need. You get a crap GP, no treatment for you!

Mine and Mrs D's recent experiences with our local surgery has been one of contradicting advice amongst their own GPs, them prescribing treatment whilst admitting they didn't really know much about this sort of thing, we caught them looking things up on wikipedia whilst we were talking to them, and then having to talk to a nurse about test results rather than someone better qualified.

Whilst the NHS had all the experts we needed to talk to we ended up having to go through private medical insurance to access them. Madness.
(, Mon 27 Feb 2012, 12:34, closed)

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