Guest guest Posted January 9, 2004 Report Share Posted January 9, 2004 Dear Tia, I am sorry that I haven't replied to you sooner. I live in the UK and a lot of the doctors on that list are local to me. I cannot recommend any of them as I have never used them. I am not quite sure why you are coming to the UK to see a doctor. Is it to have a specific operation carried out? With regards to managing a pregnancy - I have classical EDS and have had four pregnancies that resulted in miscarriage (not due to EDS). I have been seeing a high risk pregnancy specialist. This specialist is a specialist in high risk pregnancies - he knows all about EDS - BUT he had never seen an EDS patient until he saw me. He is a professional and did all his research and saw me before I got pregnant to discuss how he would manage a pregnancy. Perhaps your doctors in Greece could do some research in medical literature and on the internet. But, I am lucky in that I happen to live near a very good specialist maternity hospital - is there one near you in Greece that your GP can refer you to? The maternity hospital is NHS and so is the specialist, so I do not believe that they take on private patients. This leads me to my next question. Is Greece a full member of the EU? If it is (and I am not sure about this) you can travel anywhere in the EU and get medical treatment free. This is why a lot of people in the UK are going to France for operations - as the wait is shorter than in the UK. Unfortunately, the list the Jill has does not say whether the doctors are working privately or on the NHS or both - some specialists in the UK (for example my cardiologist) work a few days a week privately and a few in the NHS. What I do know is that I imagine it will be quite hard to enter the UK medical system from abroad. To see a GP you have to be local and preferably registered. To see a specialist of any sort you have to be referred (with a referral letter) from you GP after your GP has evaluated you. If you are seeing someone on the NHS you then get onto the waiting list. If you are going privately to the specialist, once they have the referral letter they will let you book an appointment (usually the wait is a week or two). The good news is once you have seen a specialist you are " in the system " and they can transfer you around. For example - I saw my NHS GP and asked to see a cardiologist - he said the NHS wouldn't do this for me - so I said I would pay privately and the GP referred me - the cardiologist that thought I needed to see a geneticist for pregnancy advice - and I saw her under the NHS - she then transferred me to an NHS specialist at the maternity hospital in high risk pregnancies. They key is getting your referral letter in the first place. 95 per cent of GPs in the UK are NHS and no doctor above GP level will see you without a referral letter from your GP in the UK. I know this to be the case as my husband wanted to see an allergy specialist at the local private hospital and our GP wouldn't write the referral letter - and the private hospital would not give him an appointment with out a referral - in the end the GP gave in after we complained to the head of the practice. The main point I am trying to make is this: * Decide what you are trying to achieve - who do you need to see and why. * Find out if you can see a doctor in Greece who will do a little EDS research before they see you, as it is always better to have doctors nearer to home. * If you want a specific operation that cannot be carried out in Greece, find out where the best country for this may be - France has a medical system that is a lot better that the UK's. * Find out if Greece is a full EU member - as treatment may then be free to you abroad. * Please be aware the doctors in the UK are mainly NHS - waits are long and there is underfunding - but it is free and if you have a condition such as EDS I have found that they do everything to push you to the top of the waiting list. I have also found that specialists are more than willing to do research into EDS to help the patient. * It is impossible to get an appointment to see a specialist (anything above GP level) without a referral letter from your UK GP. * I would recommend you GP in Greece or your specialist use their position as your doctor to make enquiries on your behalf about either specialists in Greece who are prepared to do research and work with you, or doctors abroad- then your doctors can make the introductions for you and deal with the referral process. I hope this helps you in some way. Fay. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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