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General Practitioner Template

πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§ NHS GP Consult

A professional General Practitioner template for healthcare professionals.
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Specialty

General Practitioner

Used

7384 times

Type

Note

Last edited

06/02/2026

Created by

Naveen Nandakumar

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About this template

Streamline your general practice consultations with this comprehensive NHS GP Consult template. Designed for General Practitioners, this template provides a structured framework for documenting patient encounters, whether face-to-face or via telephone. Capture essential details from the patient's history, including presenting complaints, ideas, concerns, expectations (ICE), and relevant risk factors. Easily record examination findings, vital signs, and any investigations or results. The template guides you through forming a clinical impression, listing diagnoses, and outlining a clear management plan, including investigations, treatments, referrals, and crucial safety-netting advice. Ideal for busy GPs seeking efficient and thorough documentation for every patient visit, ensuring all pertinent clinical information is systematically recorded.

Preview template

Clinician Specialty: General Practitioner F2F Seen alone Current issues History: - History of presenting complaints: Mr. John Smith, a 45-year-old male, presents with a 3-day history of a productive cough, clear sputum, and mild shortness of breath. He reports associated generalised fatigue and a low-grade fever (max 38.2Β°C) which he has been managing with paracetamol. Symptoms started after attending a crowded concert. Denies chest pain, haemoptysis, or significant wheezing. - ICE: Mr. Smith is concerned he might have developed a chest infection and is worried about it progressing to something more serious like pneumonia. He hopes for a prescription for antibiotics to clear it up quickly so he can return to work. He expects to feel better within a few days of treatment. - Red Flag: No reported haemoptysis, severe chest pain, stridor, or significant increase in shortness of breath at rest. No signs of confusion or reduced consciousness. - Risk Factors: Smokes 5-10 cigarettes/day for 20 years. No known history of asthma or COPD. Works as an office administrator. - PMH/PSH: Hypertension well-controlled on medication for 5 years. No significant surgical history. - DH: Amlodipine 5mg OD. Paracetamol PRN for fever. - Allergies: Penicillin (rash). - FH: Father had a history of chronic bronchitis. Mother has Type 2 Diabetes. - SH: Lives with wife and two children. Social smoker (5-10 cigarettes/day). Occasional alcohol (2-3 units/week). Denies illicit drug use. No recent travel abroad. No carers. Examination: - Vital signs: T 37.8Β°C, Sats 96% on room air, HR 88 bpm, BP 132/84 mmHg, RR 18 breaths/min. - Physical or mental state examination findings including system-specific findings: General: Alert and oriented, mild respiratory distress noted on exertion. ENT: Mild pharyngeal erythema, no tonsillar exudates. Chest: Good air entry bilaterally, scattered coarse crackles heard in both lung bases, no wheeze. CV: S1 S2 dual, no murmurs. Abdo: Soft, non-tender, no organomegaly. - Investigations and results: Point-of-care CRP: 25 mg/L (mild elevation). Impression: Acute lower respiratory tract infection, likely viral given the onset and current CRP level, but bacterial infection cannot be entirely ruled out. 1. ?Acute Bronchitis Plan: - Investigations: None at this stage, will review CRP if symptoms worsen or persist. - Treatment plans including medications if discussed: Advised conservative management with adequate rest and hydration. Continue paracetamol for fever/discomfort. Provided safety-netting advice regarding worsening symptoms. No antibiotics prescribed at this time given likely viral aetiology and mild presentation. - Referrals required or advised: None at present. - Follow-up arrangements including timeframe, setting or instructions: Review with GP in 3-5 days if symptoms not improving or worsening, or sooner if red flag symptoms develop. Advised to book a routine appointment. - Safety netting advice: Return immediately or contact 111 if experiencing severe shortness of breath, chest pain, confusion, coughing up blood, or if symptoms are significantly worsening despite self-care measures. Call 999 for emergency if sudden severe breathing difficulty or collapse.

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