Whooping Cough Vaccination

It has been recently announced that there is to be a national campaign to vaccinate pregnent women between 20 and 38 weeks against Pertussis (Whooping Cough). This is due to a considerable increase in pertussis in the UK. The current outbreak is the largest seen in the UK for over a decade.

NHS Ultrasound Services

NHS Ultrasound Services at Silverdale Practice (at the Avenue Clinic on London Road) This service is provided by Diagnostic Ultrasound Services and the Director is Sally Hill.

This Centre offers a choice of ultrasound scans on the NHS under the AQP (any qualified provider) initiative.

You must be referred by your GP.

Most scans are performed within two weeks of being referred.

These include:

  • Gynaecology
  • General abdominal (liver, kidneys, pancreas, spleen and aorta)
  • Prostate
  • Musculo-skeletal
  • Vascular
  • Small Parts – which include testes, thyroid, lumps & bumps and hernias.

A report is sent to your GP and you will need to make an appointment with your GP to discuss the results.

Further Information

For further information or private appointments please email: ultrasound.scan@gmail.com

Flu Clinics

The flu jab is the best protection against the virus each autumn. Healthy people don’t need to be vaccinated; for most people flu is uncomfortable but not serious. 

You can get a free flu jab if:

  • you are 65 or over;
  • you are living in an old people’s home or nursing home;
  • you have a long-term (chronic) condition such as a heart problem, asthma, kidney disease, diabetes;
  • you have a lowered immune system due to disease or treatment such as steroid medication or cancer treatment;
  • you don’t have a spleen, or if your spleen doesn’t work properly.

If in doubt about whether you should have this or not please ask a member of staff.

A flu vaccine is recommended in pregnancy- please see information further down.

If a patient has an egg allergy please ask to speak to one of the nurses as some vaccines are now cell based.

The Practice has robust processes in place to ensure that patients receive the correct flu vaccination for them, whether over or under 65 years of age, or in a ‘at risk’ health group.

However patients should be aware, if an individual has inadvertently received a flu vaccine different to the one recommended for their age group, they will be informed of the error and the potential implications of this error.

The national influenza immunisation programme 2022 to 2023: information for healthcare practitioners states:

Individuals aged 65 years and over (particularly those more than 75 years of age) may not respond as well to the QIVe as they would to the vaccines recommended for their age group (aQIV, QIVr or QIVc). If they wish to receive the vaccine that they should have been given, this can be offered following a discussion of the benefits and risks. There is clear benefit in the additional protection that may be offered by the correct vaccine but they should be alerted to the potential increased risk of a local or systemic reaction. Although there is no data available on the safety and effectiveness of administering a second flu vaccine shortly after the first in adults, this advice is based on general principles of vaccination and experience of flu revaccination following cold chain and administration incidents.

If a decision is made to offer the vaccine the individual should have received, it is recommended that this is done as soon as possible after the first dose was given and ideally within a week.

This will enable protection to be made as soon as possible. It can still be given if more than a week has elapsed however.

If an individual under 65 years of age is given aQIV in error, they will not require revaccination.

Although the vaccine is currently licensed from 65 years of age, studies (21, 22) have looked at the immunogenicity and reactogenicity of this vaccine compared to non-adjuvanted flu vaccine in the 18 to 64 year old age group.

These have found that the adjuvanted vaccine was highly immunogenic with good levels of protection achieved. Reporting of local reactions (pain and warmth at the injection site) and systemic reactions (chills and aching muscles) was higher than in older age groups and when compared to those who received an adjuvanted vaccine.

Where the aQIV has been inadvertently administered to people in the 18 to 64 year age group, they should be informed that they may be more likely to develop a reaction following the aQIV than they have experienced following previous flu vaccinations. However, the studies showed that in those who experienced reactions, these generally occurred within 3 days of vaccination and were mild, transient and self-resolving.


Pneumococcal Vaccination

There is a pneumo jab to protect against serious forms of pneumococcal infection. For most it’s a one-off vaccination. If you would like more information, contact the surgery. You can have this vaccination if you have not had it before and:

  • you are 65 or over;
  • you have chronic disease of the heart, lungs, liver or kidneys;
  • you have diabetes;
  • you don’t have a spleen, or if your spleen doesn’t work properly;
  • your immune system doesn’t work properly (due to HIV, chemotherapy etc);
  • you have a CSF shunt; or you have a cochlear implant; or
  • you are under 5 years old and have previously had pneumococcal meningitis / bacteraemia;

If in doubt about whether you should have this or not please ask a member of staff.

Travel Health

PLEASE CONTACT US AT LEAST 6 WEEKS BEFORE YOU INTEND TO TRAVEL

If you are possibly planning or have booked a trip abroad and are seeking travel health advice, Silverdale Practice offers a travel clinic service with one of our travel health specialist nurses.

We would first ask you complete a travel risk assessment form so we can assess your risk, the recommended vaccines, any necessary malaria tablets (if you’re travelling to a malarious region) and the advice most appropriate for your needs. Once you have completed and returned this form to the practice, we will contact you to make an appointment with one of our nurses.

We regret that no traveller will be seen without a completed risk assessment form. Under the services a GP provides for travel, there is an obligation to give vaccines to provide, free of charge protection against hepatitis A, typhoid and tetanus, polio and diphtheria and travel advice. However if there is not enough time before you travel or you require to be seen at specific times or days of the week then you may want to investigate private travel clinics in Sussex.

Silverdale practice are pleased to be able to offer a more specialist service with a greater choice of vaccines you may require, for example rabies which you would otherwise have to travel to a private travel clinic for. Yellow Fever is currently not available. These vaccines are not free on the NHS. At this present time payment can only be made by BACS or card payment at Silverdale.

Hepatitis B£60 per Injection
Japanese B encephalitis£100 per Injection
Meningitis ACWY£85 per Injection
Rabies£80 per Injection
Tick Borne encephalitis£65 per Injection
Prescription Admin £15

To help us give you the best possible care, it is essential that you help us in our work by following the instructions below.

Every potential traveller MUST complete a travel risk assessment form.  How do you do this? Fill in the form below and our nursing team will contact you.

Alternatively, you need to collect a form directly from the surgery, complete and return it and we will contact you to make an appointment.

We would also ask you to go to Fit for Travel site (links below) and look up the destination you are travelling to, print off the information, read it and bring with you when you attend your appointment

Many thanks for your co operation and we look forward to helpig you travel safely.

Carer’s Support Service

If you are currently a carer and feel you need support then please contact the Practice.

Sigmoidoscopy Clinics

Dr Robert Denney also works as GPs with Special Interest, seeing patients who are referred by GPs across Mid Sussex.

For more information, please see the relevant pages in our Further Information section.

Maternity

The Midwife may be contacted at the Princess Royal Hospital. Telephone: 01444 441881 ext. 8414, between 08:30 and 09:30

Breast Screening

Women over 50 years of age will be called to attend at the nearest local clinic for a mammogram. Appointment letters will be sent to the patients who are required to attend every three years. The results are sent directly to the patients as well as to the practice.

Cervical Screening

Reminder cards will be sent to women aged 25-64 when their smear is due. Follow up letters will be sent out to patients who have not attended and are overdue for appointments. It is vitally important patients attend for this service.

Minor Surgery

Our doctors are trained in a full range of minor surgical techniques and we offer a minor surgery service for many procedures. Please make an appointment with your doctor to discuss this.