Moving from NHS England to Scotland

Hi

my mum currently lives in London and I’m in Scotland, currently waiting on a biopsy on NHS England.  If a positive diagnosis is received I would need her to move in with me in Scotland, but I’m worried will this slow down her treatment?

anyone know how I would even go about this.

any advice would be much appreciated 

  • When I'm moved within England I got a hard copy of all my hospital notes, reports,and  operation notes. You can also get copies of MRI scans and CTs . You have to pay but it was well worth it for me as I could take the whole huge bundle with me as transfer of records took forever- months!! 

    I was on surveillance not active treatment when i moved so I can only say that having my records stopped a delay with my next colonoscopy. 

    It's also very important to register with a GP ASAP as everything seems to start there and also a good idea to have those hard copies with you as backup.

  • Hi 

    thank you so much for responding to my thread.

    I really appreciate your advice!!!!  I will get on it tomorrow to get the ball rolling.

  • Awesome thank you that’s extremely helpful!!

  • Just thought of something more.Hospital records reports etc are from NHS England. But GP records are from your mums surgery- request via practice manager. Then with the 2 sets of info you get complete picture of primary and hospital records

  • Fab, you would think it would be one centralised digital system, and something someone could do with the click of a button.

    Again thank you for the wonderful advice it’s is much appreciated 

  • This is my line of work for NSS [National Services of Scotland]

    NHS England and Wales is separate from NHS Scotland. Meaning, when you register at a new GP practice in Scotland, it takes a bit more time for your new practice to receive English GP records because our systems are completely separate. Hospital records and GP records tend to be separate regardless of where you're from, but they're easier to transfer information from England to England, rather from England to Scotland and vice versa. The new treating hospital will request previous records, but it will take a little bit longer. But it should all be done via the hospitals etc

  • Forgot to add, your mum will have an NHS number, she'll need and be given a CHI number because Scotland doesn't use NHS numbers.

  • You're very welcome. Apparently different hospital trusts don't share the same IT systems - good grief !  GP Systems rely on email from the hospital. At my grand old age of 68 I dispare lol. And dont get me started on hospitals sharing records  

  • If I hadn't had a hard copy of my hospital and GP records I'd have waited forever. GP records took 3 months and then only a summary. Hospital here still 9 years later doesn't have everything only what I provided as hard Copy, and they scanned the info in

  • I share your frustration, we are at the very start of this journey and I’m already frustrated with the lack of joined up thinking.  I’ve been bouncing between GP, private clinics, consultants now to a hospital - 4 weeks of trying to expedite getting my mum a diagnosis and that’s me doing MRI and PET CT scan privately.

    i work in tech n it’s so obvious how things could be more efficient.

    we now need a biopsy done but my mum is really struggling she’s losing mobility in her arms and hands and I want to bring her home but I’ve been advised to get the biopsy in England then do the transfer