ouinon wrote:
Thank you very much for all the replies. Really appreciate it.
Looks as if the worst that can happen is a long waiting list and/or huge waits between parts of the assessment procedure? Which I can see could be really really frustrating and tiring and inconvenient. But no total disaster stories so far.
I suppose it's possible that some people are not getting diagnosed because of budgets or whatever, who *should* be, which *would* be a disaster?
What about Birmingham? anyone have exp there? Or the south coast ( my aged p's live there )?
Thanks again!
.
You can bypass the long waiting times if you get a private referral instead of an NHS one. Obviously if you'd have to pay if you went private. I'm not sure how much most private assessments cost, but a place I looked at in Milton Keynes charged £995 for a standard assessment (and £2100 for an enhanced one!). Not cheap.
It's more likely that people would be refused a referral for budget reasons than a diagnosis. The assessment is the expensive part, regardless of whether it's a "yes" or "no" at the end. To this end, since it's a GP who will most likely be making the referral, you may want to find a sympathetic GP first of all. I don't know if you can have a talk with a GP before registering, but if you can, then I would do that - tell them what you're after and see what they say. Saves wasting time with registering with a GP surgery, only to be denied a referral because of funding reasons, being just outside the catchment area, or whatever.
Would one of your aged parents be able to make it to the assessment? My mum came with me to my final one. She wasn't just a bystander, the psychiatrist quizzed her quite closely, especially about my early childhood. I reckon that clinched the diagnosis for me, tbh.