Sturgeon-Lamb said:Good afternoon.
I am making enquiries with the relevant office to establish if this was said. It is my position that this is a matter for the GP and the patient. It is not a police matter.
Regards,
Fraser Lamb
Chief Inspector
Firearms and Explosives Licensing
Police Scotland
"If there is any incident with an FAC holder"-about as rare as a terrorist attack, maybe rarer ; would you charge for attending one of those or is that part of the NHS salary ?
Ask yourself why 90 % of GPs do not reply to the police???? Suggestions please
It doesn't. But the I agree that the question from the police form is asking for a medical opinion rather than a reporting of the facts.
Ie the question is wrong, not the intent.
again, can you give an example of when this has happened
Because if I go off the rails and start shooting everyone in the next village north, Question 1 "Do you have concerns" leaves them wide open when victims lawyers come calling.
The GP is a GP not a psychotherapist or psychoanalyst and is not qualified to answer Q2 in its entirity.
Most GP's are on the 'locum trail' these days so don't really know their patient well enough (if at all).
If they answer any of the first 2 questions ... it leaves them wide open when victims lawyers come calling.
They have a childhood resentment of men in uniform ?
The though of having to speak to anyone who dares to think they have authority over them promotes derision and bed wetting ?
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Regardless of how all this is panning out you would have to be virtually brain dead to think that GPs would put themselves in any kind of position where they could be held to blame if a FAC/SGC holder lost it and went on a shooting spree.
Ian.
The reason why 90 % of doctors do not want to sign the form in S Wales ...
. Given this statement of the b******g obvious, why did the BMA ever agree to the arrangement?
There should be just two questions for GP's:
Does the individuals medical record contain any of the notifiable conditions?
Have you placed a marker on the patient file?
Bish bosh done.
All factual, no opinion required, all very sensible.
Hear Hear ...
The idea that our medical records are marked to show we have guns in our possesion has merit (in my opinion), as stated that's a 15 second job to enter the read code, and i beleive it will provide a step towards the 10 year licence.
I see two main problems at the moment, the complexity and culpability of the current form and the additional charge hoisted upon the applicant.
The problem is Police Scotland making up there own criteria, the HO guidence is very simple and the standard letter only asks if GPs have any concerns over the applicants suitability to have a FAC/SGC and to put a marker on the applicants medical records.
As Miki said the marker would take seconds to do and if there are any concerns the GP need only say so, then police will ask the applicant to request a full medical report from his GP for which it has been agreed he will pay for.
Police Scotland have decided that if the applicant does not pay for their initial letter or the GP surgery fails to respond then no FAC will be issued, this is not the fault of the GPs or the applicant its Police Scotland who should be getting a verbal bashing on this thread.
Ian