Here goes!I have severe COPD and I had a flu jab approx. 1 month ago. About 10 days after that I felt I was going down with an infection and I used my rescue pack - Amoxycillin and Preds. I felt functional, although poorly, whilst taking the steroids but the day I finished them was devastating. I could not breathe at all and felt really panicky. I called the emergency doctor and was given more antibiotics (Doxycillin) and Preds. And for 5 days I took them and waited to feel better and they made not the slightest scrap of difference and so back to the doctor again. Now here's where it gets really bizarre. My surgery is an amalgam of many different places and just across the car park there is an x ray dept. So I was sent for a chest x ray. I sat in the waiting room for an hour-ish waiting for an emergency appt, whereupon the doctor says "I can't give you MORE antibiotics, you'll have to go to A&E (across town) where they can swab you for flu, do blood tests and have a look at your x ray which I can't see" Said x ray having just been done in that very same building we were standing in!? So off I go to A&E - wait 3 and 1/2 hours to be swabbed. "Congratulations, you've got flu." Wear a mask in the waiting room - another 4 hours to see a doctor, pack of Tamiflu, throw the antibiotics away. Finally - 5 days later - I feel much better.
I can't fault the NHS here. On each occasion I asked and was given an emergency appointment. The staff were caring under grossly stressful circumstances - winter flu and norovirus at A&E. But, I do not understand the organisation which means I could not have been tested for flu the first time I went to the doctors. The number of times and places I have trudged about - I'm like a walking epidemic. I've spent approximately 10 hours sitting in waiting rooms in the last 3 weeks, along with vulnerable and sick people. Apart from seeing at least half a dozen different health care providers who also might have caught flu from me. Why could the doctor not see my x ray? And how did I get the flu after having the jab? I think my problem (with hindsight) was a simple one and in fact, it's been awful. I'm self employed so no sick pay, and I've lost a lot of money right before Christmas. My daughters have had to look after me AND I've taken needless courses of antibiotic. It's very depressing.