No Fortnite for a fortnight! NHS doctor writes prescription telling his 11-year-old patient to lay off the video games because they’re ‘impacting his life’
- Dr Amir Khan used Twitter to reveal the prescription he wrote for the schoolboy
- Dr Khan has featured on Channel 5 documentary GPs Behind Closed Doors
- The World Health Organization recognises ‘gaming disorder’ as a condition
An NHS doctor wrote a prescription telling his 11-year-old patient to stop playing the video games Minecraft and Fortnite.
Dr Amir Khan, a GP in Bradford who featured on the Channel 5 show GPs Behind Closed Doors, revealed his unorthodox treatment on Twitter.
He said addictive computer games were ‘impacting’ the boy’s life.
Although Dr Khan’s prescription was light-hearted, it highlights a darker issue. Doctors last year revealed plans to open the NHS’s first specialist internet addiction clinic.
And the World Health Organization recognises compulsive video gaming as an official mental health condition.

Dr Amir Khan, who works as a GP in Bradford, West Yorkshire, told one of his 11-year-old patients to stop playing so much Fortnite and Minecraft
Dr Khan, who goes by @DrAmirKhanGP on Twitter, said: ‘The best prescription I gave today was to an 11yr old lad.
‘”No Minecraft of Fortnight for two weeks, doctors orders!”
‘Addictive computer games impacting his life. I even wrote it on a prescription pad and signed it! Good luck to the pharmacist who gets that!’
Dr Khan, who has more than 20,000 followers on Twitter, is a partner at The Ridge Medical Practice in Bradford, West Yorkshire.
He has featured in the documentary series GPs Behind Closed Doors, which gives a behind-the-scenes look at doctors’ surgeries around the country.
People replied to Dr Khan’s tweet with mixed feelings.
Some said addiction was a serious issue, while others suggested the boy could be playing games to cope with other problems.
Paula McGowan, a campaigner for children with learning disabilities, said: ‘This is a huge problem with many children being addicted to gaming, parents do need to take some responsibility for this.’
The World Health Organization last year listed ‘gaming disorder’ as a real medical condition for the first time.

Dr Amir Khan tweeted that he had written the prescription on a real prescription pad and told the boy video games were ‘impacting his life’

The World Health Organization last year officially recognised gaming disorder as a real mental health condition, characterised by addiction to video games such as Fortnite (pictured)
WHO officials said this recognition was important to address a need for treatment for the worst-affected individuals.
And doctors in the UK last year revealed plans to open a specialised internet addiction clinic in London to help young people hooked on games and social media.
Dr Henrietta Bowden-Jones, a consultant psychiatrist, said NHS funding should be used to tackle the growing number of compulsive internet users.
Dr Bowden-Jones, a member of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, commented at the time of the WHO’s gaming disorder classification.
She said: ‘We come across parents who are distraught, not only because they’re seeing their child drop out of school, but because they’re seeing an entire family structure fall apart.’