يحاول ذهب - حر
Does the doctor really need to see you now?
July 22, 2025
|Scottish Daily Express
Alarming new research reveals that more people than ever are going to hospital or their family doctor for health hiccups they could treat themselves

Would you go to accident and emergency for a minor problem such as travel sickness, acne or conjunctivitis? As crazy as it sounds, thousands of people are doing just that, new research reveals.
Despite intense pressure on the NHS, the latest Self-Care Census - the annual survey of consumer attitudes to minor health conditions by the consumer healthcare association PAGB - shows that one in 10 would seek hospital treatment for a minor health complaint.
And what's even worse is that number is an increase from a year ago - when one in 12 admitted their go-to for treatment was a hospital A&E.
The census shows that easy-to-treat issues most likely to prompt a visit to A&E are muscle sprains and strains (6%), issues around the contraceptive pill (6%) and ear infections (5%). Other ailments in the top 10 are allergies such as hayfever, acne, travel sickness, urinary tract infections, haemorrhoids, conjunctivitis and ulcers.
Pharmacist Mark Burdon, an adviser to the PAGB, says: "There will always be grey areas, such as differentiating between a severe muscle sprain and a broken bone. But it's worrying that so many people still see A&E as their first option for issues that could be treated more quickly and conveniently with over-the-counter products.
"A pharmacy should always be your starting point for minor ailments - we have the expertise and time to advise on the most suitable treatments.
"If it is something more serious, which requires a GP appointment, we can refer you back to one, so reception knows you need more than self-care."
And the potential savings for the NHS are enormous. A report by Frontier Economics estimates that every year at least 25 million GP appointments and five million A&E visits are used for self-treatable illnesses at a cost of £1.7billion to the NHS.
هذه القصة من طبعة July 22, 2025 من Scottish Daily Express.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من Scottish Daily Express
Scottish Daily Express
BEAR WITH ME
Muscat could ask McCann to keep seat warm for him
1 mins
October 15, 2025

Scottish Daily Express
Tories: walk-in GP clinics just a ‘stunt’
JOHN Swinney’s plans to set up a network of walk-in GP clinics across Scotland have been dismissed as “back-of-a-fag-packet stuff” and a “pre-election stunt”.
2 mins
October 15, 2025

Scottish Daily Express
Our giant pumpkin squashed a world record!
After 50 years of persistence and near misses, British twin brothers Ian and Stuart Paton have finally beaten the Americans with their homegrown ginormous gourd. ADITI RANE gets the inside scoop on how they did it
5 mins
October 15, 2025

Scottish Daily Express
Emheirgency services
Kate's burning desire for full speed fire engine ride
3 mins
October 15, 2025

Scottish Daily Express
Woman, 83, ‘punched by neighbour’ in King’s town
Fracas after car fumes ruin wine in the garden, jury told
1 mins
October 15, 2025

Scottish Daily Express
Steroid creams could help body fight cancer
STEROID creams could help fight cancer thanks to an unexpected discovery, according to research.
2 mins
October 15, 2025

Scottish Daily Express
Queen star no longer speaks to bandmates
GUITAR legend Sir Brian May has admitted he and Roger Taylor no longer speak to their former Queen bandmate John Deacon despite spending 27 years working together.
1 mins
October 15, 2025

Scottish Daily Express
Labour's betrayal of brave Northern Ireland veterans
Ex-troops fear prosecutions for actions during Troubles
2 mins
October 15, 2025

Scottish Daily Express
Is he Mooey Armstrong?
SOME very appreciative cows think this jazz trumpeter is the best thing they've ever herd...
1 min
October 15, 2025

Scottish Daily Express
Rice work if you can get it on first British crop
THE first rice crop grown in the UK is being harvested after the hottest summer on record.
1 min
October 15, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size