The
Practice takes it very seriously if a member of staff or one of the doctors or
nursing team is treated in an abusive or violent way.
The Practice supports the government’s ‘Zero Tolerance’ campaign for Health
Service Staff. This states that GPs and their staff have a right to care for
others without fear of being attacked or abused. To successfully provide these
services a mutual respect between all the staff and patients has to be in
place. All our staff aim to be polite, helpful, and sensitive to all patients’
individual needs and circumstances. They would respectfully remind patients
that very often staff could be confronted with a multitude of varying and
sometimes difficult tasks and situations, all at the same time.
However,
aggressive behaviour, be it violent or abusive, will not be tolerated and may
result in you being removed from the Practice list and, in extreme cases, the
Police being contacted.
In order for the practice to maintain good relations with their patients the
practice would like to ask all its patients to read and take note of the
occasional types of behaviour that would be found unacceptable:
We ask you to treat your GPs and their staff courteously at all times.
A good patient-doctor relationship, based on mutual respect and trust, is the cornerstone of good patient care. The removal of patients from our list is an exceptional and rare event and is a last resort in an impaired patient-practice relationship. When trust has irretrievably broken down, it is in the patient’s interest, just as much as that of the practice, that they should find a new practice. An exception to this is on immediate removal on the grounds of violence e.g. when the Police are involved.
In rare cases, however, because of the possible need to visit patients at home it may be necessary to terminate responsibility for other members of the family or the entire household. The prospect of visiting patients where a relative who is no longer a patient of the practice by virtue of their unacceptable behaviour resides, or being regularly confronted by the removed patient, may make it too difficult for the practice to continue to look after the whole family. This is particularly likely where the patient has been removed because of violence or threatening behaviour and keeping the other family members could put doctors or their staff at risk.