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Full colour PDF of the pages as they appeared in ‘best practice’.
Printer friendly PDF.
PATIENT ADVICE PRINTOUTS
Electronic Safety NET Notes available at www.bpac.org.nz
Patients often remember little of what we say during consultations. Important information may be forgotten. We try to overcome this by giving out notes or pamphlets to take away.
Electronic notes have several advantages:
- They can be prewritten as form letters in our Practice Management Systems (PMS).
- They can be embedded in templates, which contain practice information such as phone numbers or after-hours contact details.
- They can be personalised, electronically or manually, for individual patients.
- A record of the note is automatically placed in patient’s notes.
The Department of General Practice at the Dunedin School of Medicine has identified three essential components of information to give to patients at the time of acute presentation. For teaching purposes this has been labelled as Safety NET.
The three components are:
Normal expectation – What can be expected and when to return in normal circumstances.
Emergency signals – Signs and symptoms of a possible emergency and how to respond.
Timely review – Indications things may not be progressing as expected and urgent review is advisable.
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| Healthline is available for free, confidential health advice 24 hours a day |
| Healthline nurses do not diagnose over the phone but will assess the situation and provide advice as to the best course of action. |
| Call 0800 611 116 from either a landline or a mobile phone. |
| Your child may need a further check up |
| Your Doctor or Nurse may want to check your child even if things appear to be going as expected. If you have been advised to have a check up, write the details here: |
| Check up time and date: At the following location: Name of person doing the check up: Phone number: |
| For more information visit |
| www.kidshealth.org.nz |

