Do doctors misdiagnose patients? Absolutely, but in most cases it is not the fault of the doctor or anyone else for that matter. Most people who complain of headache have a headache and not a brain tumour. Most people with a pain in their leg have just that and the symptoms subside and in the absence of other symptoms, history or cause for concern sending patients to hospital is a waste of time and money and potentially dangerous. I've had patients suffering PTSD following humiliating diagnostic tests. If a patient comes in saying they have constant headaches and can't get a particular smell out of their mind, have lost time, have developed weakness somewhere or their family says they have a changed personality then a GP would refer the patient for urgent investigation. The terrible truth about general practice is that some days over half the patients you see have no reason to be in the room which justifies any medical response. Like most GPs I do not do as many night visits as I used to but the number of times I have been in a family home in the middle of the night to treat an hallucinating child with a very high fever and the answer to the question "have you tried Calpol?" was "we have run out" or "I forgot to buy some" is staggering. The main reasons people use nuclear options of turning up at A&E or calling for a doctor or, worse, an ambulance at 3AM are difficulty in gaining access to a GP quickly or astonishing stupidity of parents and carers. If people didn't make appointments just so they can moan about some aspect of their life which they already know how to resolve the stupid parents of the poor child might have been able to get through at 8:30 AM when the phones get answered and pain and anguish would be avoided all round. In that context and with so little time available there is a tendency to diagnose the obvious because that is what it is. Sometimes mistakes are made but the doctors in our practice send many people to hospital who don't think they need to go because we have spotted a symptom the patient thinks is irrelevant. If middle aged men made appointments with their GP instead of shrugging off the pain in their left arm, "heartburn", difficulty in urinating or urinating too much the, already very respectable, life expectancy in this country would improve greatly. In most countries people have nothing like the 24 hour access to appropriate healthcare that people in the UK have and, yes, things need to improve on the medical side but also on the patients' side.

