And I’ll be worried with any combination of pain and symptoms not forecast by a very recent treating Dr very recently, it’s night, I’m by myself.
For sure. The thing to note is that A&E has a triage system, and whatever the combination of symptoms that initiated the trek in the middle of the night to the A&E will have to get past the Triage nurse. So invariably there will be people who will be waiting for hours and those who will have no wait.
Hence the often asked question "should I go to the A&E" . Most will have enough common sense to discern what is a must go and what is a take 2 panadol. However, every day people turn up to the A&E for obviously minor ailments.
Some are not so obvious.
Many moons ago I had a fellow come in past midnight. He fell in the grass and went home, but woke up with severe back pain
Came in. Luckily it was quiet and he was seen to quickly. The exam revealed nothing in particular and initially we thought he was just sore from falling.
However, the Xray showed a 30cm long palm frond in his back. He had stabbed himself on a palm frond. Needed surgery
Then you have the classic - kid with the sniffle, temperature and feeling unwell. Seen in A&E , nothing serious, gets sent home and dies from meningitis.
A good dr is also happy to encourage you to ask Q’s or patiently explain the answer a 2nd time
Sure, except that the good Dr is not at the end of the telephone call 24/7
There are nurse staffed hotlines these days which can help with the question of "should I go to the A&E".