Manchester Evening News

Homeless people now able to use GP surgeries as part of new scheme

- By CHARLOTTE COX charlotte.cox@men-news.co.uk @ccoxmenmed­ia

HOMELESS people will now be able to access immediate healthcare at GP surgeries in Greater Manchester – and it could be life-changing.

Rough sleepers often struggle to see a doctor because they have no permanent address and find it difficult to register at a practice.

It means many homeless people are turned away from GP surgeries and they are often forced to go to A&E. But ten surgeries will now open their doors in a project to improve access to NHS healthcare. They are:

Dam Head Medical Centre, Blackley, Manchester

Royton Medical Centre, Royton, Oldham

Longsight Medical Centre, Longsight, Manchester

Lime Square Medical Centre, Openshaw, Manchester

Fallowfiel­d Medical Centre, Fallowfiel­d, Manchester

Beacon Medical Centre, Victoria Avenue, Blackley

Medlock Medical Centre, Failsworth, Oldham

BARDOC out-of-hours, Prestwich walk-in centre, Bury

The Dale Medical Practice, Rochdale

BARDOC out-of-hours, Waters Meeting Health Centre, Bolton

The scheme, which launches this week, was founded by Beacon GP Care and will also involve BARDOC, which provides out-of-hours services in Bury, Heywood, Middleton, Rochdale and Bolton. ‘Survival kits’ will be handed out to rough sleepers, containing blankets, bottled water, sleeping bags, and a list of participat­ing surgeries.

Dr Zahid Chauhan came up with the scheme. He said:“Not only are A&E department­s busy, but they also don’t have informatio­n about the background problems, so they are basically just fire-fighting.

“I have seen a woman who had a minor leg infection, but she could not get to see anyone as she did not have a proof of address.

“All she needed was a course of antibiotic­s to make her leg better, but she struggled for weeks and weeks.”

Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham – who has pledged to end rough sleeping in the region by 2020 – said the scheme could save the NHS money. “It is much cheaper for somebody to wander into a practice than to go into A&E,” he said.

“It makes sense to give people that care when they need it rather than letting it become a much greater problem.

“It is quite a sobering fact to realise that the average life expectancy for somebody rough sleeping or homeless is 47. I’m 47, so that really hits home hard for me and it’s why I am so personally committed to this.”

 ??  ?? Dr Zahid Chauhan
Dr Zahid Chauhan

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