Meet the Clinical Team

Who do I see and for what?

Doctors

Provides overarching responsibility for patent care and handles most serious, acute, and complex issues direct.

Dr McColl

Role: GP Partner
Gender: Male
Qualifications: tbc

Dr Odunfa

Role: Associate Partner
Gender: Male
Qualifications: tbc

Dr Stephen Fisher

Role: Salaried GP
Gender: Male
Qualifications: tbc

Nurses

Supports patients managing long-term conditions and leads on screening and immunisation programmes.

Wilhel Powell 

Role: Advanced Nurse Practitioner
Gender: Female
Available: Monday, Wednesday and Friday

Grace Orgri

Role: Practice Nurse
Gender: Female
Available: Monday to Friday

Healthcare Assistants

Works within the nursing team, providing hands-on care eg. dressings, blood pressures. ECGs and many more diagnostic processes.

Nursing Associates

Work with healthcare support workers and registered nurses to deliver care for patients and the public.

Katie Wild

Role: Nursing Associate
Gender: Female
Available: Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday

Physician Associates

Support doctors in the diagnosis and management of patients.

Community Nurses

Provide an important educational and advisory service for patients and families.

Clinical Pharmacists

Having a clinical pharmacist in the GP team means you can be treated by the best person to meet your needs.

Our clinical pharmacists

  • Sophie Gibson
  • Suzanne Wong

Pharmacy Technicians

Works under licensed pharmacist to prepare and dispense medications to patients and medical providers.

Medical/GP Assistants

Provide a support role, carrying out administrative tasks, combined in some areas with basic clinical duties.

Mental Health Practitioners

Their role is to build effective relationships with people who use mental health services, and also with their relatives and carers.

Social Prescribers

Not a clinician, but can advise on service availability, signposting patients to the appropriate clinician, supporting patients in access to social services.

First Contact Practitioners

Relatively new role in the NHS. Initially will involve providing physiotherapy advice/remedies, but will eventually expand to psychology and paramedic task providers.

Phlebotomists

Undertakes most blood-taking functions, thus avoiding unnecessary hospital visits.