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Reviews, get directions and contact details for The Stennack Surgery

The Stennack Surgery

About

Pay & Display Car Park Open Monday-Friday 18:00-08:00 & Saturdays, Sundays & Bank Holidays 24 hours

Proceeds help support Stennack Surgery Services

Address: The Old Stennack School, The Stennack, Saint Ives TR26 1RU, UK
Phone: 01736 793333
State: Cornwall
City: Saint Ives
Zip Code: TR26 1RU

opening times

Monday: 8:00 AM – 8:00 PM
Tuesday: 8:00 AM – 8:00 PM
Wednesday: 8:00 AM – 8:00 PM
Thursday: 8:00 AM – 8:00 PM
Friday: 8:00 AM – 8:00 PM
Saturday: Closed
Sunday: Closed

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Reviews
Default Dr who replaced Dr Philip has no idea how he is lacking professional knowledge and is putting health at risk. On two occasions I have had wrong medication prescribed by him. On three occasions he forgot one of my medications on my repeat prescribed medication. He has also wrongly given diagnosis of life threatening illness. Be aware it's your health this place is " playing" with. I have also heard of several other Stennack surgery patient's having similar experiences.
9 years ago (01-01-2018)
Phones up to book an apt "yeah sure, how does next Tuesday sound?" Too many patients, about time that the St Ives, Carbis Bay, Lelant and Halsetown Area had a second GP surgery.
9 years ago (30-11-2017)
brilliant service! went to surgery as a temporary patient whilst on holiday. Fantastic doctor! i was struggling with my baby boy for weeks in my surgery and dr here explained everything and helped us better then anyone before! Shame i dont remember his name! i wish to have doctor like this in our city! reception staff so kind and helpful!
9 years ago (20-04-2017)
Very poor service. Instead of help I recive advice to go privately. Such a shame of them. But that’s the brutal truth.
9 years ago (06-12-2017)
GP:Practice Comment. A doctor called me in for a check up and advised me to change my medication to rivaroxiban which could have the side effect of nose bleeding 'but we would have to keep an eye on that' . Two weeks later I had a bad nose bleed which eventually stopped. I reported this but felt I was dismissed as a worrier over nothing. A further two weeks on a Sunday when the surgery was closed I had a nose bleed which just would not stop, necessitating me going to A&E to eventually have my nose cauterized. When I returned to my home where I live alone I had to insist on talking to doctor who finally decided I needed a home visit as I was unable to drive . It turned out I had lost so much blood I was now aneamic and was prescribed a course of iron tablets. The doctor insisted I should keep on taking rivaxiban. Four months later, for no accountable reason, my nose started bleeding profusely again, this time the surgery was open so I called for advice on how to stop the bleeding and eventually was allowed to speak to the original prescribing doctor who told me to ring 999 as 'everybody does it' as they had no idea how to stop the bleeding and moreover now tells me they had known people die of nose bleed. I managed to explain to the doctor I lived alone and it was very difficult for me to speak as my mouth kept filling with blood. The doctor said they were sorry but that was all they could say. Luckily a paramedic was present when I became unconscious or I might well have died from nose bleed. I spent over 48 hrs in AE while they struggled to stop the flow. Since returning and although my notes have been sent to the surgery I have again had to push through the surgeries indifference to get an appointment with the prescribing doctor to discuss their prescription. Other than that I was told to just ring 999 if I had a reoccurrence. No problem then!! Just go away. This surgery is well on the way to the digital future where doctors are vituall indistinquishable from automata , dispensing pills and nostrums as if their future depended on volume rather than efficacy and mechanically intoning 'Come back in three weeks if it doesn't work' A rigmarole that goes on dispensing more and more medictation until the ailment heals or rectifies itself
9 years ago (21-05-2017)
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