Ghost writing for a GP - one of my many talents!
I helped a GP write an article for a magazine they wanted to get published in. If you'd like help with any content do give me a shout.
https://bjgplife.com/the-
The Doctor will see you now is a book worth reading. Dr Amir Khan deep
dives into the recent headlines covered by newspapers across the country
highlighting ‘’Doctors suffering ‘wave of abuse’ over lack of face-to-face
appointments’’ (telegraph) or ‘’Face-to-face GP visits still near lockdown
levels’’ (BBC) and ‘’PM Boris Johnson warns NHS GPs that thousands will
‘suffer’ without face to face appointments’’ (daily mail). The intense pressure
us GPs are constantly facing can at times feel like a landslide ready to take
us under.
The book would help any non-medical person get an in-depth view into an
NHS GP’s highs and lows. The book is well written and keeps the reader engaged
from start to finish. As a professional GP myself, I struggle with time for my
own hobbies let alone reading things other than patient notes. I believe though
if I had, had the time I would have finished this book in a day. The book
reveals the human and often overlooked side of a GPs work which can be deeply
emotional & involve psychological stresses for both the GP and the patients
he is dealing with. Dr Khan explains and relates these interactions powerfully.
As a fellow GP I found some of his interactions quite whimsical and they
made me take a step back and evaluate if I would have in fact dealt with my
patients in a similar fashion or not! He comes across as genuinely connected to
the well-being of his patients and tries to treat them as individuals and not
just a sea of numbers. I thought where the little girl came in with anxiety around
the practice staff and he took the time to go see her in the car and later
dedicated time to work with her mother to create material for such children to
familiarise themselves with the staff before they came in was an incredibly
admirable gesture. Busy GP’s may have the best intentions for their patients
but following through on these is usually difficult and at times almost
impossible. I did feel that certain interactions seemed somewhat exaggerated to
keep the reader engrossed but that doesn’t mean they weren’t real. How we all
deal with our patients can be a very individual, occasionally rewarding and
very focused effort. Dr Khan paints a colourful and often enlightening picture
across the myriad of patients he sees.
He reminds us how “as GP’s we can become almost robotic with our
gruelling schedules of endless thankless tasks” but there is a dim light at the
end of the tunnel. Unexpected gifts and thank you cards out of the blue! The
fact that patients would take the time out to Thank us always feels like a huge
win. It is a much-needed boost of morale and appreciation that GPs crave.
He highlights how GPs swallowed up by their busy lives use that as an
excuse for not getting help for themselves. This did worry me and made me
realise how paramount taking care of our own well-being is becoming. The
pressure on GP’s can be all consuming but we must not forget the greater good
we are a part of and how prioritising and making time for what is important to
us personally is crucial to our mental health.
He talks about what keeps him going as a GP and his examples were
relatable and eye opening. He took time out to console a mother when she lost
her child. He feels the responsibility and at times the heavy burden of the
continuity of care he must provide for his patients that with old age are dying
and need him more than ever.
He salutes and values the team he works with whom he has come to trust
and appreciate. Our own individual surgeries are filled with remarkably
talented people who create these teams and when we come together, we are
stronger and we save lives. I sometimes feel the fact that we as teams and GPs
on our own save lives on a daily basis is something that the media conveniently
forgets when it does choose to report on us. We need to remind ourselves that
in our own small and sometimes inconsequential ways we are hero’s. I don’t mean
to blow my own trumpet here but when the masses don’t, we sometimes need to do
it ourselves.
Then the pandemic hit and engulfed everything. How we consult; how we
interact and communicate with patients; colleagues, family and friends
everything drastically changed. Dr Khan emphases the effects of the pandemic on
the workload and pressures faced by GP practices. He, like most of us, hopes
that policy makers listen to GPs and bring about realistic changes. We need
practical solutions to evident problems and not just false promises of change.
An outdated system is being pushed to its limit and the after affects will be
far reaching for generations to endure.
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