Scottish Daily Mail

Can I get hold of my private hospital records?

- DR MARTIN SCURR

QIS ONE entitled to one’s health records from a private hospital? I am now retired and can no longer afford private health cover. I’m being treated on the NHS for a heart condition and would like my private records to be made available to the NHS. Keith Basson, Warrington.

AIn a word: yes. The data held in your records is your data and both the private hospital where you were treated and the practition­er who treated you are legally obliged to provide you with that informatio­n.

It is possible that part of your records is held at the hospital, while your consultant will also have copies of some of your data — and there may also be a degree of duplicatio­n.

In any event, make your request in writing, initially to the medical records officer at the hospital.

a full set of records will include reports of investigat­ions such as X-rays and other scans and laboratory tests, as well as clinical notes from your doctors.

If there are no notes in the file when you receive it, write a letter to the consultant to request a copy of the notes he holds.

Some organisati­ons charge a fee for providing copies of medical notes, which I think is rather irritating. Given what the hospitals charge, they should really provide the service for free, or at least ask for only a very minimal fee. (Many level excessive charges for sending the files, which, in this computer age, cannot take too much admin time.)

You may also be requested to collect the files, rather than entrust them to the post. Most facilities will not send such documentat­ion by email on account of the need for confidenti­ality and the potential problem of them being hacked. When it comes to getting hold of nHS hospital records, contact the records manager, or patient services manager, at your hospital trust.

QFOR the past 15 years, I have experience­d an intense pain in my gullet, often brought on by eating or drinking. It can cause hiccups for a short while, but these usually end within minutes.

However, 18 months ago, the pain was so intense I briefly passed out. Recently, it happened again — this time resulting in two cracked ribs and a black eye.

Blood tests and an ECG have found nothing. Ian Hughes, Bromsgrove, Worcs.

AWHaT an alarming turn of events. I think it’s most likely that the bouts of pain are due to irritabili­ty of the oesophagus — the muscular tube linking your throat to your stomach — because of acid reflux.

I note that you do not seem to have suffered the more typical symptoms, such as heartburn (a sense of acid heat or discomfort in the region of the oesophagus — this can occur anywhere between the bottom of the sternum and the back of the throat), acid sensations or difficulty swallowing. So I think your oesophagus is being irritated by so-called ‘silent’ acid reflux.

acid reflux is due to the valve at the top of the stomach malfunctio­ning, allowing acid to pass up into the oesophagus.

Studies indicate that acid reflux is the most common cause of oesophagea­l pain, even when there are no other obvious signs of reflux, such as hoarseness.

The painful sensations you describe occur as a result of acid — or hot or cold food — triggering pain receptors in the oesophagus wall. This, in turn, can at times cause abnormal movement or spasms in the muscular walls of the oesophagus.

One study of more than 900 patients investigat­ed for chest pain, found that 28 per cent had abnormal movements in the oesophagus and 3 per cent had actual spasms.

So why did you faint? I suspect an intense spasm of the oesophagus may have overactiva­ted the vagus nerve, which runs from the neck down into the abdomen and supplies both the oesophagus and the heart.

This would then trigger the heart rate to slow and blood pressure to drop, and the resulting brief lack of blood could have caused you to faint — what we call a vasovagal episode.

a trial of acid suppressio­n is called for. This involves taking a proton pump inhibitor (for example, omeprazole, 40mg twice daily) for eight weeks to suppress acid production by the stomach.

Most physicians would prescribe this after an investigat­ion by endoscopy, which is where a camera is put down the oesophagus to inspect the lining. However, your doctor may decide to prescribe this anyway.

If acid suppressio­n does not help, I would talk to your GP about referral to a gastroente­rologist with an interest in oesophagea­l function for further tests to confirm acid reflux (by measuring the levels in the stomach) and manometry (pressure-testing to see if there are spasms or any other unusual movements in the oesophagus).

These additional investigat­ions would help to pin down the exact cause of your frequent bouts of pain.

In view of the potential for sudden collapse to cause serious injury, I urge you see your GP promptly.

 ?? Picture: GETTY ??
Picture: GETTY

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