Call the surgery, give them your mobile number and inform them no other number is to be used. Inform the manager of the surgery about your concerns about a breach of patient confidentuality.
convoluted, cause I use abbreviations ? Surely it's clear that I dont want my mother in law (MIL) poking into my medical records. A new surgery would, hopefully, not be known to the old bag.
Your MIL shouldn't be able to get any sort of access to *your* records.........no matter who has what initials.
Your records would have been separate from your OH, too.
How can you be certain that she has gained access to them ?
Why else would her phone number be on my records when she has never used the same surgery; I've been there for 40+ years, albeit rarely used but am peeved that my loyalty has been so abused.
The one person on here who does work for the NHS doesn't understand your question!
As I have said before. If you change GPs then you register your address and contact details with this one.
If you stay with this GP then you call and change your contact details and then ask to speak to someone regarding the breach of confidentiality you think has happened to get the situation resolved.
When your register at a new surgery, your current surgery are contacted and send, 'physically send' your patient records to the new GPs.
If, however, you haven't asked for the correction, they will arrive at your new surgery with your MILs 'phone number exactly where it is at the minute !!!!
My son needed his sprained ankle dealt with, that's how i found out. I Informed the surgery 3y ago of their phone error but MIL number is back on our records.