Flu & COVID Vaccination Clinics

Flu and COVID vaccinations will launch on Thursday 3rd October 2024 in Ellesmere Port town centre.

The clinics will be held in two locations:

*Weekdays: Civic Hall, Ellesmere Port

*Saturdays: Old Job Centre, Port Arcades

Please see below for clinic dates and times and eligibility criteria.

Please do not miss this opportunity to protect yourself and those around you this Winter.

York Road Group Practice is a part of One Ellesmere Port Primary Care Network (PCN). The PCN a collaboration of the 6 GP Practices from across the town who are working together to develop better services for our patient population.

Travel Vaccinations

If you require any vaccination relating to foreign travel you will need to complete an online consultation via PATCHS at least 6 weeks before you travel. Within that form it is important that you include:

  • Dates of travel
  • Length of travel plans
  • All places travelling to, all countries (any rual area/package holiday etc.)
  • Activities you will be doing at each destination: backpacking, working as an aid worker, contact with animals, youth hostelling, or visiting off the beaten track.
  • Details of previous vaccines

After you have submitted the online consultation request one of our admin team members will contact you to organise a telephone consultation with our practice nurse. The practice nurse will then ring you discuss your foreign travel and organise the appropriate vaccinations.

Vaccinations provided by us on the NHS

  • Tetanus
  • Polio
  • Hep A
  • Typhoid
  • Hepatitis B
  • Japanese encephalitis
  • Meningitis
  • Rabies
  • Tick borne encephalitis
  • Tuberculosis (TB)
  • Yellow Fever
  • Malaria medication

Patients wishing more  complex travel vaccines will need to book with the local Pharmacy or private travel vaccine clinics

Available local Travel Clinics:

  • Boots
  • Superdrug
  • Liverpool school of tropical medicine

Care Records

Online patient access to records

Patients can access their medical records online. You will be able to view your repeat prescriptions, allergies, laboratory test results, documents, immunisations, problems and consultations. You can choose whether you would like full access to your medical records, or certain aspects you would like to have access to.

If you would like to sign up to view your medical records on-line you will need to register to do this at the surgery in order to be allocated your login and password.

  • You will be required to bring in a physical form of photographic ID into the practice
  • Complete the registration form

If you care for someone who needs help ordering their repeat prescriptions online or would like to access your child medical records online, you can register as a proxy user. You will need to have access to your own account, but the proxy user can be added onto your profile. Both parties, (the proxy and the representative) will need to come into practice to show photographic ID and sign the form.

Summary Care Record

This is the National database, the record will be available to authorised healthcare staff providing your care anywhere in England, but they will ask your permission before they look at it.

Children under 16 will automatically have a summary care record unless a parent or guardian chooses to opt them out.

Cheshire Health Record

The Cheshire Health Record is a system designed locally to enable authorised doctors, nurses and other trained healthcare professionals to access a summary of your GP patient record. This could happen in hospital or unplanned care settings such as A&E or Out of Hours Centres. The system will provide essential medical information which can be used to make informed clinical decisions about the treatment provided to you.

Opting out of the schemes

You can choose not to have a Summary Care Record or Cheshire Health record by completing an “opt out” form. Please ask at reception. We will then enter a code into your records so your data cannot be shared. Your records will stay as they are now with information being shared by letter, email, fax or phone

If you change your mind you can opt back in at any time.

For further information:

Please contact the Customer Solution Centre (formally PALS) 01244 650368 or the practice.

How we use your medical records – Important information for patients

  • This practice handles medical records in-line with laws on data protection and confidentiality.
  • We share medical records with those who are involved in providing you with care and treatment
  • In some circumstances we will also share medical records for medical research, for example to find out more about why people get ill.
  • We share information when the law requires us to do so, for example, to prevent infectious diseases from spreading or to check the care being provided to you is safe.
  • You have the right to be given a copy of your medical record.
  • You have the right to object to your medical records being shared with those who provide you with care.
  • You have the right to object to your information being used for medical research and to plan health services.
  • You have the right to have any mistakes corrected and to complain to the Information Commissioner’s Office. Please see the practice privacy notice on the website or speak to a member of staff for more information about your rights.
  • For more information ask at reception for a leaflet

The NHS is dedicated to protecting your information

Everyone working for the NHS has a responsibility and a legal duty to protect your personal information, so that it is not disclosed to unauthorised bodies or people.

Your information is recorded on paper and in computer files. It is treated with strict confidential care.
We sometimes need to move electronic information about you from one computer system to another, by extracting the data and modifying it ready to be passed on. Tests are made regularly on the data to check that it is getting transferred correctly.

Why we ask for personal information

In order to provide the best possible healthcare, we need to maintain proper records of your health and make sure that it is available to the relevant people whenever and wherever possible.

The doctor needs to make notes about any diagnosis, test result; treatments including drug prescriptions and other information that you provide that are relevant to the treatment of your condition.

Nurses and other health professionals will have access to these records, and will add their own notes, as part of your overall healthcare.

Secretaries, receptionists and other clerical staff need access to some of your records in order to complete administrative tasks such as booking appointments and for communicating with you and health care professionals.

The practice complies with General Data Protection Regulations and Access to medical records legislation. Identifiable information about you will be shared with others in the following circumstances:

  • To provide further medical treatment for you e.g. District Nurse & hospital services
  • When we have a duty to others e.g. in child protection cases / Vulnerable adults
  • To help you get other services e.g. Social work department. This requires your consent
  • When you request us to complete insurance or solicitors forms – this requires your consent
  • Anonymous patient information will also be used at local and national level to help the Primary Care Trust and Government plan services e.g. for diabetic care. If you do not wish anonymous information about you to be used in such a way, please let us know.

We may use some of the information for other reasons

Anyone who receives information from us about you is under a legal duty to keep it confidential.

You may be receiving care from another organisation as well as the NHS. To enable us to work together for your benefit, we may share information.

We may use some of the information for other reasons, such as to help us protect the health of the public generally, e.g. Notification of infectious diseases. Reports will extract the information from your records. This in turn enables the NHS to run efficiently by making plans for the future, using the figures passed to them, and looking at ways the numbers can be reduced.  Training the staff, enabling them to carry out a review so that the care they provide is always of the highest standard.

Information may also be needed to carry out medical and other health research for the benefit of everyone.  Research projects are always approved by a local research ethics committee.  If anything to do with research involved you personally, you will be contacted to see if you are willing to take part.

Improvements and advances in medical care and treatment can only occur by monitoring current practices.  Sometimes managers and planners as well as researchers may need to examine records to assist in this process.  All data that could identify you personally is removed.

In addition, the NHS maintains a number of registers for diseases such as cancer, to allow the NHS to plan the services it provides. These registers are used to monitor the effectiveness of treatments, therefore over time improve the outcomes for specific conditions. Tests and the transferring of your data is carried out under secure and carefully controlled conditions. The law controls the sharing of very sensitive personal types of data. We continually review ways in which confidentiality improvements can be made. It is important for us to know and understand the views of our patients and users of our service including carers. If you provide consent your friends, relatives and carers can be kept up to date with the progress of your treatment.

Who to contact for further information

If at any time you would like to know more about how we use your information and how it is maintained, handled and looked after, you can speak to the person in charge of your care or to the Caldicott Guardian here in the Practice.

Here at York Road your Caldicott Guardian is Dr C J MacDonald & Mrs Bedford or visit the NHS web site on www.NHS.uk

Freedom of Information Act

All health bodies are covered by the Freedom of Information Act which gives all interested parties a general right of access to all types of recorded information.
If you have any questions please ask for an information leaflet at reception.

Local Authority

We will be providing useful information from the Cheshire West Local Authority:

  • Live Well : Advice on many different subjects from housing to transport

Nurse Services

The Nursing team provide the following services in fully equipped treatment rooms, between 8am and 6pm Monday to Friday.

Practice Nurses

Our practice nurses hold surgeries for:

  • Annual Long Term Condition Reviews
  • Cervical smears and swabs
  • Contraception & HRT Checks
  • Vaccinations & Immunisations – including travel & baby immunisations

Sexual Health Clinic

We provide the following services:

  • Implanon fit & removal
  • IUCD fit
  • IUCD removal
  • Contraceptive advice

Health Care Assistant (HCA)

The HCA services include blood tests, ECG’s, new patient checks, vaccinations, immunizations, and weight checks.

Please book an appointment with the Health Care Assistant for any of the following:-

  • Blood tests
  • B12 injection
  • Urine tests
  • Blood Pressure checks
  • Ear care
  • ECG
  • Glucose tolerance test
  • Learning Disability Health Reviews
  • New registration health check
  • NHS health check
  • Shingles injections
  • Weight/healthy lifestyle follow-up
  • Flu & pneumonia jabs.

Healthwatch

Healthwatch is a website with useful advice and support about the health and social care services in our local area and nationally.

Dressing Clinic

Our service is provided by Cheshire and Wirral Partnership (CWP) for patients following a hospital procedure who need removal of sutures or change of dressings.

To access an appointment at the local dressings clinic please telephone 0151 488 8467. It is now located at Hope Farm Clinic.

Dental Care

Urgent Dental Care

Local dental providers offer NHS Urgent Dental Clinics across Cheshire and Merseyside, with appointments for patients who need urgent treatment, advice and support on dental queries or referral to other services.

If you need help with an urgent dental problem, call our Helpline, available from 9am to 9.30pmevery day, including weekends and Bank Holidays. Call 0161 476 9651 (LOCAL RATE). Find out more by reading this leaflet.

Please note this an appointment system only.

First Contact Physio

First contact physiotherapist can help patients with musculoskeletal issues such as back, neck and joint pain.

As part of our Primary care network (PCN) we have 4 first contact physiotherapists working across all 6 GP practices in Ellesmere Port offering face to face appointments.

Appointments can be booked either here at the practice or across the other 6 GP practices in the PCN or at Stanney Lane clinic.

What is a first contact physiotherapist?

Breast Screening

What is breast screening?

  • Breast screening checks or mammograms, use X-rays to look for cancers that are too small to see or feel
  • These checks are done by female health specialists called mammographers
  • Anyone registered with a GP as female will be invited via letter to attend a screening every 3 years between the ages of 50 and 71
  • The first invitation is automatically sent out to those eligible between the ages of 50 and 53. You will then be invited every 3 years from that point on until you turn 71

If you have not been invited by the time you are 53 and think you should have been, or are over 71 and want to continue to be screened you can contact your local breast screening service:

Chester Breast Screening Unit, Countess of Chester Hospital NHS Trust

Tel: 01244 365136

How appointments work

You invitation letter will ask you to book an appointment by phone, email or online. Try to book your appointment as soon as you get invited.

It may be important to provide the screening service with additional information to ensure your appointment works best for you.

To help them plan your appointment please tell the service if you:

  • need additional support to attend screening – for example, if you have a learning disability or difficulties with your mobility
  • have breast implants – you may need an extra X-ray to get a clearer picture around the implant
  • have a pacemaker or another medical device implanted
  • are pregnant, think you could be pregnant or breast feeding
  • are under the care of a breast consultant
  • have had a mammogram in the last 6 months
  • have had a Covid-19 vaccine within the past 5 days – some people may have swollen glands in their armpit which can be picked up by the X-rays

What happens during the screening?

  • During breast screening you’ll have 4 breast X-rays (mammograms), 2 for each breast
  • The mammograms only take a few minutes. The whole appointment should take about 30 minutes
  • The mammographer will explain what will happen during the screening and answer any questions you have
  • Breast screening can be uncomfortable or painful for some people. You can talk to the mammographer, who is trained to give you support. You can also ask to stop at any time.
  • Any discomfort or pain you may have during a mammogram should go away very soon, if your pain persists for more than a couple of days, please contact the surgery to speak with a GP

Your results

  • Your results will be sent to you in the post, usually within 2 weeks of your appointment. The surgery will also receive a copy of the results
  • On rare occasions you may be required to have another mammogram to get a clearer picture of your breasts. In this case your results would be sent to you after the second screening.

No sign of breast cancer – You breast screening result letter may say that your mammogram shows no sign of breast cancer. You will not need further tests and will be routinely invited again in 3 years.

Need further tests – Your results may say further tests are needed and you will be given an appointment.

These tests can include:

  • An examination of your breast
  • More mammograms
  • Ultrasound of your breasts
  • Taking a small sample (biopsy) from your breast using a needle

Most people who need further tests will not be diagnosed with breast cancer.

You may feel anxious about having further tests and what this means. Your letter will tell you how to contact a breast care nurse if you have any questions or would like to discuss the process.

Try not to worry if your results take a little longer to arrive – it does not mean anything is wrong, and most people will have a normal result.

You can call the breast screening service on the above number to see if they have any updates.

  • Regular breast screening is one of the best ways to spot a cancer that is too small to feel or see
  • As well as going for regular breast screenings it is important you know how your breasts normally look and feel

See here for more information: How should I check my breasts? – NHS (www.nhs.uk)

If you have symptoms of breast cancer or you notice any changes in your breasts that are not normal for you, you should book an appointment with your GP, even if you have recently had a clear breast screening – Do not wait for your next screening appointment.

Macmillan Cancer Support has a free helpline that’s open every day from 8am to 8pm and are there to listen if you have anything you want to talk about.

Call: 0808 808 0000