One
of the most important qualifications to be a GP is the ability to be psychic.
Take some of the following examples of consults provided by our doctors:
GP: What is the problem?
Punter:
I don’t know you tell me. YOU are the doctor? Boom, boom!
The
vet is trained to deal with dumb animals which as a doctors we cannot legally
treat, next.
GP: What drugs did the hospital/out of ours
service/your friend give you in this morning’s early hours?
Punter:
I don’t know it is on you system . . .
GP: We have no record of this.
Punter:
. . . er they were from my previous GP
GP: Who was that?
Punter: I don’t know is it not on your system?
And
so on examples of the NHS total brainectomy that is performed the minute a
patient walks into any GP’s surgery which is instantly reversed when the patient
leaves and suddenly suffers Total Recall after they light their first fag after
the unbearable agony imposed by the Party of not being able to smoke in public
buildings.
The
second thing they do after their relief, and getting their brain back from the
NHS, is answer their friend who phoned them as they sat down in the
consultation to ask “what has the doctor said?” They then tell their friend
that “the doctor was crap because they knew nuffink about me even though I told
them all about what was wrong with me and what drugs I were taking. They didn’t
listen to a word that I told them . . .”
Now
that is your average punter but there are others that are even worse take the
insurance industry.
The
insurance industry, unlike the NHS, exists to make money and in order to do so
employs intelligent people to try and predict using historical data and complex
maths the likelihood of a Russian Mig 15 dropping on a shed in Slough stuffed
full of mustard gas kept by great granddad from WW1 just in case Napolean
invades England while he was on the toilet and then estimate how much this likely
event would cost them.
They
use this information to calculate premiums which must generate a profit and
cover the cost of any potential claims. Despite this fiscal accuracy when it
comes to helping themselves to your money they too expect GPs to be psychics.
They
provide forms with questions similar to these time and time again:
At
the time that the insurance was
purchased what was the state of health of your patient?
At
the time that the holiday was booked
what was the state of health of your patient?
This
is like asking a GP when did your patient last have a dump? Clearly you average
Northernshire GP would have been in the patient’s bathroom at the time and most
importantly documented this fact contemporaneously for each and every patient
such is their interest in their patients’ well being and dedication. Others
might view such dedication in a slightly different light which is why most GPs
don’t keep such tabs on their patients to this extent.
Clearly
most if not all GPs missed the lecture at medical school which said that as
part of taking a medical history IT IS MANDATORY that you must always ask of a
patient:
When
did they last purchase holiday insurance?
and
When did they last
book a holiday?
Can
anyone guess what the patient’s answer will be to the insurance industry’s
questions?
Praise
be to the Party for creating holiday insurance an industry which knows the
answers to some of the questions on the forms they send out to GPs but
presumably for reasons of confidentiality or data protection don’t put the
answers on these forms.
So
if they get an answer on their forms saying “don’t know it’s on your system”
you will now know why. GPs are not psychic and deal with plenty of other time
wasters every day.
1 comment:
big brother know all the answers to the right questions, nice critical article. cheers1
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