My GP never wrote a this kind of letter and need to know what he needs to put in it.
If i email on the contact us site (dutch site) i get as response they are to busy and i need to call them.
The GP just needs to write a short letter, on headed paper, with just saying the condition that the person has and how it affects them and will affect them in the park.
My doctor wrote for my son,
so and so has blah blah blah and does not undertand the waiting in lines and large crowds, and uses a pushchair as a wheelchair. please condsier this family for a disabled pass for your park.
We have to get this everytime we go, as it has to be dated within 3 months of your visit.
Thanks for the info Ruth, Mum was enquiring with me about something along this line as her legs give her a good bit of trouble and shes not great with her diabetes. Its not very well under control so she can be prone to dizziness and was worried about all the queues.
Just beware the pass will only be for your mum + 1, they won't allow the whole family to use it. My husband has this access card and he was turned away a lot last week with 2 of our children, he had to take 1 child then the other after which caused a lot of tears.
Another word of warning: I was given an extremely hard time because I had a recent only 6 weeks old letter in December. They didn't believe me that my issues are permanent because "the letter is new." They wouldn't even budge when I reminded them of their own rules that you do need a recently dated letter.
They can do more than that for attractions, but you have to specifically ask for that. Also it will depend on the CM, they may give you grief about it. 4 for attractions seems the limit.
We asked and we was in there an hour complaining even spoke to a manager. We had the same issue in September too and when we went in June last year.
They told me you can only get more than 1 guest if the letter stated the problem was permanent which it did but they appeared to only read the bits they chose too. One CM tried to say ours was fake as it wasn't stamped but doctors surgerys don't stamp these days they just print on headed paper and sign.

Hmmm - not sure what to do. Rosebug's consultant said he would put a note in her letter about DLP as she is now on increased doses of movicol again (which we so never expected to be an issue still) and it has reverted her back to her old issues (which she got a pass forlast trip) and that she is adjusting to medication which causes various symptoms. The letter came through (with more bad news that she is under-active again yadda yadda etc.) and it doesn't specifically state anything about DLP; just states that she has autoimmune thyroid disease and chronic constipation; and then a print out stapled with her symptoms highlighted (feeling the cold; fatigue; irritability etc.)
Will this be enough or should I contact our GP for a slightly better letter? Or maybe I should just email them. She is really having a tough time atm, and I am kind of wishing we had booked for later in the year - we just really thought they would have had her level and managed by now (so did they I think!)
could you possibly take a buggy for rosebug? to protect her from the elements a bit? use raincover, cosy toes etc. she's still quite young isn't she?