Your GP will discuss with you – and, if appropriate, your carer – about why a referral is being done. It is usually because your GP wants a specialist’s help in deciding on the best way to treat your condition. A hospital consultant is a specialist in one specific area of medicine, surgery or psychiatry.
Part of the reason for referral may to get a test or investigation that cannot be requested by a GP, or carried out at the GP’s surgery.
Your GP will also discuss with you what choices there are for where you can be referred. For example, you may be referred to a more distant hospital where the waiting lists are shorter.
Your GP will send a referral letter to the consultant. This will explain:
This should be with the consultant on the day you meet them at the hospital.
GP practices and hospitals use different ways of arranging appointments:
The appointment will usually be in an area called an ‘outpatient department’. This is to distinguish it from a ‘inpatient’, who is someone who is currently staying in the hospital.
You will see either:
A registrar or nurse should discuss their plan with the consultant.
If the consultant says you need an investigation (e.g. blood test, x-ray, ultrasound or CT), procedure (e.g. colonoscopy) or operation, he/she is responsible for:
Ask the consultant what to do if the date of the event is not suitable for you; or nothing happens and you are not sent any dates.
The consultant prescribe a new medication for you, or might want to make changes to the medicines that you are already taking. If its a new medicine, the consultant is responsible for:
Either way, after this, you will need to contact your GP surgery if another prescription is required.
In some cases – e.g. a very specialist or expensive drug – your GP will not be able to prescribe it. And you will need to continue to receive these from the hospital. You will be told about this at your appointment.
The consultant will tell you whether you will need a follow-up appointment(s), or whether you will be discharged back to your GP. If the consultant thinks you do need to be seen again, the hospital will give you another appointment (face-to-face, or virtual, i.e. on then phone) or tell you when to expect this. If you do not hear anything, please contact the consultant’s secretary, rather than your GP surgery.
If you have any specific questions related to your hospital care, your consultant will be able to help you with this. So it is important that you know how to contact them via your consultant’s secretary.
We have described what it means when a GP gives you a referral to see a hospital consultant. We hope you understand it better now.