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Cold Weather Alert & Information
Our website has been updated with the latest information around weather alerts, cost of living advice, help heating your homes and other information such as keeping well this winter by taking up our offer of seasonal immunisations. You can find the information from the website front page under Health Information or click here to be taken directly to the page
New telephone opening times from 1st October 2024
From Tuesday, 1st October 2024, Maypole Health Centre will be opening its phone lines from 8am each weekday morning to book GP appointments.
Patients will NO LONGER be asked to call from 8.30am or again 1.30pm.
Please note, patients will be asked by the receptionist to give a brief description of their symptoms/reason for the appointment so that they can be given an appointment with the most appropriate clinician.
Influenza Vaccinations from September 2024
Flu is not just a heavy cold. Flu occurs every year, usually in the winter, which is why it’s sometimes called seasonal flu. It’s a highly infectious disease with symptoms that come on very quickly. Colds are much less serious and usually start gradually with a stuffy or runny nose and a sore throat. A bad bout of flu can be much worse than a heavy cold.
The most common symptoms of flu are fever, chills, headache, aches and pains in the joints and muscles, and extreme tiredness. Healthy individuals usually recover within 2 to 7 days, but for some the disease can lead to hospitalisation, permanent disability or even death.
Flu vaccines help protect against the main types of flu virus circulating.
They include:
- everyone aged 65 years and over
- everyone under 65 years of age who has a medical condition, including children and babies over 6 months of age
- all pregnant women, at any stage of pregnancy
- all children aged 2 and 3 years (provided they were aged 2 or 3 years on 31 August before flu vaccinations starts in the autumn)
- all children in primary school
- some secondary school-aged children (Years 7 to 11)
- everyone living in a residential or nursing home
- everyone who receives a carer’s allowance, or are the main carer for an older or disabled person
- all those living with someone who has lowered immunity due to disease or treatment
- all frontline health and social care workers
Call the surgery on 0121 430 2829 to book an appointment.
Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) Vaccine
The RSV vaccine helps protect against respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), a common virus that can make babies and older adults seriously ill. It's recommended during pregnancy and for adults aged 75 to 79.
Who should have the RSV vaccine
The RSV vaccine is recommended if:
- you're pregnant – the vaccine is recommended during every pregnancy (from 28 weeks onwards) to help protect your baby after they're born
- you're aged 75 to
If you're aged 80 or over
If you turned 80 on or after 1 September 2024, you're eligible for the RSV vaccine until 31 August 2025.
You're not eligible for the RSV vaccine if you turned 80 before 1 September 2024.
Please call the surgery to book an appointment on 0121 430 2829.
For more information, a patient leaflet can be found below:
Pregnant women
For adults aged 75 to 79