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GP Earnings

All GP practices are required to declare the mean net earnings (eg. average pay) for GPs working to deliver NHS services to patients at each practice. This is required in the interests of greater public accountability recognising GP pay is ultimately funded from tax paid by the public.

The average pay for GPs working in The Old School Surgery in the last financial year was £65643 before tax and national insurance. This is for 0 full-time GPs,17 part-time GPs and 2 locum GPs who worked in the practice for more than six months.

Access to medical records

There are several different types of health records, accessing them is free, and healthcare professionals have a legal requirement to allow you to see them.

GP records

GP records include information about your medicine, allergies, vaccinations, previous illnesses and test results, hospital discharge summaries, appointment letters and referral letters. You can access your GP records, and nominate someone you trust to access them by contacting us directly or through GP online services like NHS App. More information about GP online services on the NHS website: Visit GP online services.

Your Summary Care Record

If you’ve registered with us, you’ll have a Summary Care Record unless you’ve chosen not to have one. It contains basic information including your allergies, medicines and any reactions you’ve had to medicine in the past. During the coronavirus outbreak, you will also have extra information added to your record. This includes significant medical history (past and present), reasons for medicines, care plan information and vaccinations. You cannot get your Summary Care Record online. If you’d like to see it, please contact us.

Accessing someone else’s records

Health and care records are confidential so you can only access someone else’s records if you’re authorised to do so. To access someone else’s health records, you must:

  • be acting on their behalf with their consent, or
  • have the legal authority to make decisions on their behalf (power of attorney), or
  • have another legal basis for access

Applying for access to someone else’s health records

A request for someone’s health and care records should be made directly to The Surgery(1) or the NHS SAR team(2). This is known as a Subject Access Request (SAR), as set out by the Data Protection Act of 2018.

(1)To request this directly from The Surgery, please download the SAR form (there are two versions: PDF or Word), fill it in on paper or electronically and send it:

  • by post to: FAO Administration Team, The Old School Surgery, Manor Road, Bristol, BS16 2JD, or
  • by email to: general.oldschool@nhs.net

(2)To request this from the NHS SAR team please download the Subject Access Request form here, fill it in on paper or electronically and send it:

  • by post to: Information Governance Delivery Team, NHS England, 7 and 8 Wellington Place, Leeds, West Yorkshire, LS1 4AP, or
  • by email to NHS SAR team enquiries@nhsdigital.nhs.uk

More information about the NHS SAR is here.

You will need the patient or service user’s written consent if you wish to access their record. Where written consent is not possible, other arrangements will be necessary. Under the Data Protection Act, requests for access to records should be responded to as soon as possible, or within 1 month. However, government guidance for healthcare organisations says they should aim to respond within 21 days.

Refused request

We can refuse to supply some of your requests if, for example:

  • it is likely to cause serious harm to the physical or mental health of any individual
  • the information you have asked for contains information that relates to another person

If your request is rejected or you have a complaint about the process, you can complain to James Burns our Operations Manager. If you are still not satisfied, you can make a complaint to the Information Commissioner’s Office.

Patients unable to give consent

If a person does not have the mental capacity to manage their own affairs and you are their attorney, you will have the right to apply for access to their health and care records. This would apply, for example, if you have a Lasting Power of Attorney with authority to manage their property and affairs. The same applies to a person appointed to make decisions about such matters by the Court of Protection in England and Wales.

Accessing children’s records

A person with parental responsibility will usually be entitled to access the records of a child who is aged 12 or younger. Children aged 13 or older are usually considered to have the capacity to give or refuse consent to parents requesting access to their health records unless there is a reason to suggest otherwise. Although British Medical Association guidance says that every reasonable effort must be made to encourage the child to involve parents or guardians. Read more information about accessing someone else’s records.

Getting your records changed

If you think your health record is incorrect, you should let us know and we will help you to update it.

Privacy Notice

What is a privacy notice?

The EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) requires that data controllers provide certain information to people whose information (personal data) they hold and use. A privacy notice is one way of providing this information. This is sometimes referred to as a fair processing notice.

A privacy notice should identify who the data controller is, with contact details for its Data Protection Officer. It should also explain the purposes for which personal data are collected and used, how the data are used and disclosed, how long it is kept, and the controller’s legal basis for processing.

NHS England and NHS Improvement are cooperating to establish a joint enterprise. We may collect and use personal data for the functions that we exercise jointly. Our joint privacy notice explains how we do this.

As the two organisations still have distinctive statutory responsibilities and accountabilities, NHS England and NHS Improvement will continue to publish separate privacy notices explaining how we use personal data for our respective purposes.

Find out more

Teaching

Old School Surgery is a teaching practice for the University of Bristol. As part of this, we have students on placement from all five years. For the junior students, this is mainly for tutorials but the more senior students sit in on surgeries and occasionally see patients under supervision. If this is a problem for you please let reception know when booking an appointment.

We also have qualified doctors working at the surgery for 4-month placements as part of their post-graduate training. They have daily appointments and work closely with the GPs.

Freedom of Information

The Freedom of Information Act 2000 provides public access to information held by public authorities.

It does this in two ways:

  • public authorities are obliged to publish certain information about their activities; and
  • members of the public are entitled to request information from public authorities.

The Act covers any recorded information that is held by a public authority in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, and by UK-wide public authorities based in Scotland. Information held by Scottish public authorities is covered by Scotland’s own Freedom of Information (Scotland) Act 2002.

Your rights for information:

  • The Freedom of Information Act 2000 is designed to promote openness and accountability amongst all organisations that receive public money.
  • From January 1st 2005 it will oblige GP practices to respond to requests about the NHS related information that it holds, and it will create a right of access to that information. These rights are subject to some exemptions that have to be taken into consideration before releasing information.
  • In addition to accessing the information identified in the publication scheme, you are entitled to request information about our NHS services under the NHS Openness Code 1995  (see the NHS foi website page).
  • New environmental information regulations was introduced early 2003. These will enable similar access to environmental information as under the Freedom of Information Act 2000.
  • Under the Data Protection Act 1998, you are also entitled to access your clinical records or any other personal information held about you and you can contact any practice where your records are held to do this.

In more detail

To find out what patients in the most recent survey think of the practice go to the following link: www.gp-patient.co.uk

How we perform (QOF)

The Quality and Outcomes Framework (QOF) is a voluntary annual reward and incentive programme for all GP surgeries in England, detailing practice achievement results. It is not about performance management but resourcing and then rewarding good practice.

The QOF contains three main components, known as domains. The three domains are: Clinical; Public Health and Public Health – Additional Services. Each domain consists of a set of achievement measures, known as indicators, against which practices score points according to their level of achievement. The 2018/19 QOF measured achievement against 77 indicators; practices scored points based on achievement against each indicator, up to a maximum of 559 points.

  • Clinical: consists of 65 indicators across 19 clinical areas (e.g. chronic kidney disease, heart failure, hypertension) worth up to a maximum of 435 points.
  • Public health: consists of seven indicators (worth up to 97 points) across four clinical areas – blood pressure, cardiovascular disease – primary prevention, obesity 18+ and smoking 15+.
  • Public health – additional services: consists of five indicators (worth up to 27 points) across two service areas – cervical screening and contraception. For accessibility purposes, all six conditions/measures within public health and public health additional services are to be found under the one heading ‘Public Health’.

The QOF gives an indication of the overall achievement of a surgery through a points system. Practices aim to deliver high-quality care across a range of areas for which they score points. Put simply, the higher the score, the higher the financial reward for the practice. The final payment is adjusted to take account of surgery workload, local demographics and the prevalence of chronic conditions in the practice’s local area.

NHS Digital has developed an online database to allow patients and the public easy access to the latest annual QOF points as an indication of how well the surgery is doing. NHS Digital is working to make information more relevant and accessible to patients and the public, regulators, health and social care professionals and policymakers, leading to improvements in knowledge and efficiency.

For more information about QOF follow this link here: www.qof.ic.nhs.uk

To see our latest CQC report please click here

Duty of Candour

When things go wrong

At The Old School Surgery and UWE Health Centre, we endeavour to provide a first-class service at all times. However, we acknowledge that sometimes things may go wrong and our service may fall below our expected levels.

In order to comply with Regulation 20 of the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulations 2014), we pledge to:-

  • Have a culture of openness and honesty at all levels
  • Inform patients in a timely manner when safety incidents occur which may affect them
  • Provide a written and truthful account of the incident, explaining any investigations and enquiries made
  • Provide a written apology
  • Provide support if you are affected directly by an incident

We aim to achieve this by following the principles:

Openness – Enabling concerns and complaints to be raised freely without fear and questions asked to be answered.

Transparency – Allowing information about the truth, performance and outcomes to be shared with staff, people who use the service, the public and regulators.

Candour – Any person who uses the service and is harmed by the provision of a service provider is informed of the fact and an appropriate remedy offered, regardless of whether a complaint has been made, or a question asked about it.

Apology – An ‘apology’ is an expression of sorrow or regret in respect of a notifiable safety incident. It is not an admission of guilt.

Appropriate Written Records – Records are complete, legible, accurate and up to date. Every effort must be made to ensure records are updated without any delays.

Cancelling Treatment – where planned treatment is not carried out as a direct result of the notifiable safety incident.

Connecting Care

Connecting Care is a digital care record system for sharing information in Bristol, North Somerset and South Gloucestershire.  It allows instant, secure access to your health and social care records for the professionals involved in your care. 

Relevant information from your digital records is shared with people who look after you.  This gives them up-to-date information making your care safer and more efficient.

More information about Connecting Care can be found at https://www.connectingcarebnssg.co.uk

Confidentiality

Please read our Privacy Notice

Last updated Aug 25

You can be assured that anything you discuss with any member of the surgery staff, whether doctor, nurse or receptionist, will remain confidential. Even if you are under 16, nothing will be said to anyone, including parents, other family members, care workers or teachers, without your permission. The only reason why we might want to consider passing on confidential information without your permission would be to protect either you or someone else from serious harm. In this situation, we would always try to discuss this with you first.

If you have any worries or queries about confidentiality, please ask a member of staff.

We have side rooms available away from reception if required in order to discuss matters of a confidential nature.

We keep patient records on our EmisWeb clinical system.  We advise you read our Patient Record page – this includes details about sharing of your data and how you can opt out if you have concerns on this matter.

You can request access to your medical record through our Online Access provision

We assume consent for contact by SMS (text message) and email where you have provided this information, or you can explicitly consent or dissent to electronic contact.  Please ensure your contact details are up to date at all times.  We will only text or email messages that are relevant to your ongoing healthcare, with the minimum of personal content.  If you choose to opt out of receiving SMS text messages, the opt out will not apply to appointment reminders.

Confidentiality – Young people aged 13 years and above

Respecting patient confidentiality is an essential part of good care; this applies when the patient is a child or young person as well as when the patient is an adult. Without the trust that confidentiality brings, children and young people might not seek medical care and advice, or they might not tell us all the facts needed to provide good care.

Young people aged 13 and above with capacity have the legal right to access their own health records and can allow or prevent access by others, including their parents. A child might of course achieve capacity earlier or later. In any event you should usually let children access their own health records. But they should not be given access to information that would cause them serious harm or any information about another person without the other person’s consent.

Parents can access their child’s medical records if the child or young person consents, or lacks capacity, and it does not go against the child’s best interests. If the records contain information given by the child or young person in confidence, we would not disclose the information without the child’s consent.