THIVK

Better Clinics. Better Go.

clinics
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Your rights in the clinic

You should expect the best treatment. All clinics follow guidelines about what should happen there.

You have the right to expect to:

  • have your confidentiality and privacy respected
  • know the name of the person treating you
  • have explained to you what is being done and why
  • be able to complain and get a reply to your complaint
  • ask for a male (or female) doctor or nurse
  • take someone with you when you’re seeing a doctor or being treated
  • ask to be treated by a different member of staff
  • go to another clinic for treatment
  • be treated without unnecessary pain
  • be seen by a doctor within a reasonable time
  • not to be pressured into taking an HIV test and
  • be treated fairly whatever your race, HIV status, age, sexuality or what you do sexually.

Confidentiality

Any information a clinic has about you must stay confidential by law. Your medical records and test results should stay within the clinic and not go to other parts of the hospital without your permission. Information about you should not be sent to your GP (family doctor) without your written permission (unless you were referred to the clinic in writing by your GP).

If you are unhappy with your clinic

9 out of 10 gay men say they are happy with how they are treated at GUM clinics* and clinic staff are trained professionals. But you might be unhappy about the service you get. Clinics can only improve if we tell them how they could be doing things better. If you have something to say, let the clinic know - so things can change for all of us.

Making your comments or complaints known

Before taking your complaint elsewhere, speak to a member of staff first (sooner, rather than leaving it too long).

  • Ask to see the clinic’s complaints procedure. Some clinics have complaints phone lines or anonymous comments boxes.
  • Put your complaint in a letter - the complaints procedure will tell you who to send it to. You should get an answer very quickly.
  • You can make anonymous complaints, but a complaint can only be officially acted on if you put your name to it.

Complaints can really change things. For help with a complaint you can contact your local gay men’s health project.
* Findings from over 16,000 men questioned in the 2005 National Gay Men’s Sex Survey