How to make an appointment
Appointments may be booked in several ways:
Contact us with eConsult
We now offer a special service. You can have an electronic consultation. This provides a 48 hour turn around for urgent but non life threatening or immediate conditions. It can be especially useful where advice or support is needed rather than a direct consultation.
You can contact a doctor, nurse or other healthcare professional online using a website called eConsult.
By phone
Patients can book an appointment by calling reception on 020 8102 9108.
In person
Patients can visit the surgery and book an appointment with the receptionist.
Advance booking
Bookable up to 1 week ahead, these provide choice and flexibility as to when and by whom you are seen. If these appointments are filled on a particular day the receptionist will look for an acceptable alternative. A number of theses appointments are available to book online.
On the day (urgent only)
Every day at 8am a limited number of phone appointments become available, enabling you to speak to our doctors quickly if that needed. During the consultation, the GP will make a decision whether yours is an issue that could be dealt with over the phone or if you need to be seen in our practice. If the latter is the case, they will book an appointment for you to be seen either by themselves at our practice or GP at one of the hubs.
We also have walk in service Monday to Friday:
- Mondays from 7am
- Tuesday to Friday from 7:30am
Patients are seen on a first come first served basis with a limited number of face to face appointments available.
At such short notice there is much less flexibility over the time of the appointment and choice of clinician.
Telephone consultations
You can book telephone appointments with our GPs, physicians associate or nurses in advance for various issues such as ongoing medical problems, sick notes, medication changes, blood test results, investigation results and many other things to save time and your journey.
GP hub appointments
If your GP is fully booked, there are several GP hubs that also provide care for our patients.
All are open in the evenings on weekdays and on weekends. Please ask reception to refer you to the hub to avoid waiting in A&E/UCC or walk-in centre.
Wembley hub
Premier Medical Practice
1st Floor
Wembley Centre for Health & Care
116 Chaplin Road Wembley
HA0 4UZ
Phone
020 900 5460
Central Middlesex Hub
Park Royal Medical Practice
Acton Lane
London
NW107NS
Kilburn hub
Lonsdale Medical Centre
24 Lonsdale Road
NW6 6RR
Missed appointments and DNA’s
Do you feel frustrated when you cannot get an appointment?
Every year wasted appointments cost NHS £162 million. This can cause serious delays in treatment for other patients. On average approximately 150 patients each month Did Not Attend (DNA) their appointment. This means the patient did not turn up for the appointment and did not contact the surgery in advance to cancel or change the appointment. This currently results in approximately 40 hours of wasted clinical time each month.
Please call ahead if you think you might be late or no longer want your appointment.
Cancelling or changing an appointment
To cancel your appointment:
- use your NHS account (through the NHS website or NHS App)
- using the GP online system: Patient Access
- phone us on 020 8102 9108 during opening times
- reply CANCEL to your appointment reminder text message
If you need help when we are closed
If you need medical help now, use NHS 111 online or call 111.
NHS 111 online is for people aged 5 and over. Call 111 if you need help for a child under 5.
Call 999 in a medical or mental health emergency. This is when someone is seriously ill or injured and their life is at risk.
If you need help with your appointment
Please tell us:
- if there’s a specific doctor, nurse or other health professional you would prefer to respond
- if you would prefer to consult with the doctor or nurse by phone or face-to-face
- if you need an interpreter
- if you have any other access or communication needs
Home visits
Home visits are for those patients who are housebound or undergoing end-of-life care and therefore cannot get to the practice. In the time taken for the doctor to do one home visit, he could see 5 to 6 patients at the surgery. For this reason it is in the doctor’s and the patient’s best interests that, whenever possible, an effort is made to get down to the surgery. This does sometimes mean patients having to wait a while, but efforts are made to see people as soon as they arrive if their condition so dictates.
Request for a home visit should be made before 10am, and the receptionist will need to be given a brief outline of the problem. Please ensure you give the receptionist your name, address and phone number. It is very important to inform the receptionist if you are not staying at your home.
The GP may phone you first to discuss your home visit request and from the information provided the doctor will then decide what action to take next.