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Medication

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jennyjoan | 19:14 Wed 30th Aug 2023 | Body & Soul
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Can a new doctor/surgery take you off medication that you have been on for a long time and helps
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Based on my experience:-

The nurse who took your bloods/pressure may be the culprit - while I don't believe they can prescribe meds, they can get the "duty doctor" to sign a prescription off without the doctor seeing you (it happened to me only last week with Amlodipine - the practice nurse took BP, then got the "on duty" doc to sign off the prescription (presumably) based purely on her word because he never saw me.
It may be they have a preference for using certain drugs, or the ones you have been on are contraindicated in the elderly and there are guidelines recommending switching. If you put the names of the ones you were on, and the new ones I can look them up for you.
corned beef? you mean Mutton jeff?
No, she means corned beef!
Do what Rowan asked or can you get to the chemist in person and take them in and ask the chemist
Email doctors, explain your position and ask for a home visit. It might not work but it did for me and it's worth asking.
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Got the medication. Getting it delivered tomorrow
Do you mean your original medication?
How did this come about - would be nice to know after the confusion yesterday.

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