The Day of Surgery
Admission and Timing
Your admission time appears on your Carebit booking and in the hospital's own invitation letter. If there's ever a mismatch, the hospital's instructions take priority — they manage the theatre schedule on the day.
Fasting rules
General anaesthetic or sedation: No food for 6 hours and no clear fluids for 2 hours before your scheduled time. The hospital will give you exact timings.
Local anaesthetic: No fasting needed. Eat and drink as normal.
Escort: If you're having a day-case procedure under GA or sedation, you need a responsible adult to take you home. You cannot drive yourself or take public transport alone.
Arrival and the Wait
When you arrive, you'll be admitted to the ward or day-case unit. I see every patient before their operation — but I can only do ward rounds before the morning session and before the afternoon session. If there are several patients on the list, there will be a wait. This is normal, and it's part of ensuring each patient is properly reviewed. I appreciate your patience — the same thoroughness you'd want for your case is what I give to each patient before you.
The Consent Process
Consent
By the time you reach the day of surgery, you'll already have received detailed written information about your procedure, we'll have discussed it at length in clinic, and you'll have had time for follow-up questions.
The formal consent works slightly differently at each hospital:
- Nuffield Health Highgate:
- Paper consent form, signed on the day of surgery with me present.
- Electronic consent through Concentric — usually completed before the day of surgery, so you can read and consider it at home.
In both cases, I go through the key points with you personally and answer any remaining questions before you sign.
Pre-Theatre Checks
Before you go to theatre, the surgical team confirms your identity, the planned procedure, and marks the surgical site where relevant. The anaesthetist sees you to finalise your anaesthetic plan. For selected cases, we'll also run a urine dipstick test on the day.
Order of the List
If there are several patients on the operating list, the running order is determined by clinical priority — not arrival time. I coordinate this with the anaesthetist and nursing team and will keep you informed if timings shift.
In Theatre
You'll be walked or wheeled to the operating theatre. The anaesthetist will settle you in — whether that's a local injection, gentle sedation, or going off to sleep. The operation happens while you're comfortable. Afterwards, you'll spend time in the recovery room until the team is happy with your observations.