Log in to your NHS account or NHS app to access NHS services online on your computer, tablet or mobile phone.

Order a Repeat Prescription

It is easier and quicker to manage request repeat prescriptions via our online service. Simply log in and select an option.

Please allow three full working days for prescriptions to be processed and remember to take weekends and bank holidays into account. Any item not authorised for repeat by a GP will take 4 working days.

Sleeping Tablets – as a surgery we tend not to prescribe sleeping tablets, especially long term. We do not prescribe certain medications such as methadone.

NHS App

Download the NHS App, or open the NHS website in a web browser, to set up and log in to your NHS account. Owned and run by the NHS, your NHS account is a simple and secure way to access a range of NHS services online, including appointments, prescriptions and health record.

Download on the App Store
Get it on Google Play
NHS App

Not registered for Patient Access?

To request medication without the requirement to log on to Patient Access, you can request your Repeat medication by selecting the “Repeat Prescription Request ” button.

Contact your GP Online with patchs

Your Repeat Medication

If you need regular repeat medication, it is not always necessary for you to see a GP to order these. Please see below the ways in which you can order your repeat medication. If you need to have a review, the surgery will contact you to organise this. Please always order your prescriptions allowing 3 working days for them to be actioned.

Run out or just about to run out of medication requests
Unfortunately a small minority of patients are repeatedly running out (or just about to run out) of their medication. Urgent requests of this nature cause a great deal of disruption to the smooth running of the practice. Please be aware that such requests will be questioned by the reception staff and monitored by the prescribing team, and actioned if the request is appropriate by a GP. If the GP authorises the urgent request, the medication will be sent to your nominated pharmacy by the end of the day of your urgent request. If you run out of medication outside surgery hours, please contact 111 or your nominated pharmacy who may be able to assist with an emergency supply in the interim (at the pharmacists discretion).

Help with your Prescription

If you forget to request a Repeat Prescription

If you forget to obtain a prescription for repeat medication and thus run out of important medicines, you may be able to get help from your Pharmacy. Under the Urgent Provision of Repeat Medication Service, Pharmacists may be able to supply you with a further cycle of a previously repeated medicine, without having to get a prescription from your GP. 

If you have run out of important medication, telephone your usual Pharmacy to check that they offer this service; if they don’t, they may either direct you to another Pharmacy who does provide it, or ask you to phone 111 where you can request details of a local Pharmacy that provides the service.

You must then take with you to the relevant Pharmacy, proof of both your identification and of your medication (for example, your repeat prescription list or the empty box which should have your details printed on it). Please note that controlled drugs and antibiotics are not provided through this service, you will need to ring 111 for these.

If you receive stoma products from your Pharmacy or other supplier and/or receive items such as continence products, please ensure you have sufficient supplies as you may encounter difficulties in obtaining these over Bank Holidays, or when the Surgery is closed.

Help with NHS Costs

If you need help with NHS costs or need to find out if you can get free prescriptions please click the button below for further information.

Emergency planning for a Prescription

If a patient requests an emergency prescription on the day this would be requested to a GP, usually to the patients usual GP. This includes diabetic, asthma, pain killers, cancer drugs and patients that have a care plan. The patient will be contacted if there is a problem.

Schedule

Order Collect
Monday>Thursday
Tuesday>Friday
Wednesday>Monday
Thursday>Tuesday
Friday>Wednesday
  • Any item that has not been authorised for a repeat by a GP can take up to 4 working days, and hospital medication can take up to a week.

How to order your medication

Online

You can now order your repeat medication through the NHS App or Patchs (Info to register for these are above). This is the easiest and most efficient way to order your repeat medication. If you need to order a medication not on your repeat list, you can do this using the online prescription form on our website.

In person

You can order in person by returning the right-hand half of a previous prescription for the required medications, or by submitting a handwritten request. Please place in the box provided at reception.

Repeat Dispensing Service

In response to coronavirus (COVID-19), GPs and pharmacies are moving suitable patients to electronic Repeat Dispensing (eRD). You might be suitable for eRD if you get regular or repeat medicines that don’t change. eRD means your GP can send your regular or repeat prescriptions electronically to a pharmacy of your choice. You can then collect your medication from your pharmacy, or ask them to deliver it to your home. 

What eRD means for you

eRD allows your GP to send a series of repeat prescriptions to your pharmacy in one go, so there’s no need for you to order them each time. It’s reliable, secure and confidential. Your regular prescriptions are stored securely on the NHS database, so they’ll be ready at the pharmacy each time you need them.

How eRD can benefit you

If you get regular or repeat medicines, you might be suitable for eRD. Using eRD, you can: 

  • save time by avoiding unnecessary trips or calls to your GP every time you need to order a repeat prescription
  • order or cancel your repeat prescriptions online (if your GP practice offers this service)
  • pick up your repeat prescriptions directly from your pharmacy without having to visit your GP
  • spend less time waiting for your prescription in the pharmacy or GP practice, which means you can stay at home and avoid face-to-face contact when you need your repeat prescription during the coronavirus pandemic
  • save paper – you won’t need a paper prescription to collect your medicine from the pharmacy

How do I sign up for eRD?

It’s really easy to sign up for eRD – just ask your GP or pharmacist to set it up for you.

Pharmacy

Order direct with your nominated pharmacy who will send an electronic prescription request direct to the surgery for you, and we will organise this within 3 working days and send a electronic prescription to the chemist to dispense for you.

By Post

You can post your prescription slip or written request to us at the Practice.

Additional information

Hospital and Community Requests

When you are discharged from Hospital you should normally receive seven days supply of medication.

On receipt of your discharge medication, which will be issued to you by the Hospital, please contact the Surgery to provide them with this information before your supply of medication has run out.

Hospital requests for change of medication will be checked by a prescribing clinician first, and if necessary a prescribing clinician will provide you with a prescription on request. Hospital medication requests can take up to a week.

Medicines requested by Hospital Specialists

Specialists will often suggest particular medication at a hospital appointment and ask us to prescribe for you. To ensure your safety we do need to receive written information from the specialist before prescribing. Sometimes a medicine is suggested that is not in our local formulary. There is nearly always a close alternative, and specialists are told that we sometimes make suitable substitutions when you are referred. We will always let you know if this is the case.

Medication reviews

The Doctors at the Practice regularly review the medication you are taking. This may involve changes to your tablets and is in accordance with current Health Authority policies. Please be reassured that this will not affect your treatment. We may sometimes call you in for a medication review and this may involve blood tests, but an appointment isn’t always required. It is very important that you attend these appointments, as it keeps you safe whilst taking medication.

Non-repeat items (acute requests)

Non-repeat prescriptions, known as ‘acute’ prescriptions are medicines that have been issued by the Doctor but not added to your repeat prescription records. This is normally a new medication issued for a trial period, and may require a review visit with your Doctor prior to the medication being added onto your repeat prescription records. These items cannot be ordered through NHS App or Patient Access.

Some medications are recorded as acute as they require to be closely monitored by the Doctor. Examples include many anti-depressants, drugs of potential abuse or where the prescribing is subject to legal or clinical restrictions or special criteria. If this is the case with your medicine, you may not always be issued with a repeat prescription until you have consulted with your Doctor again.

Over the Counter Medicines

A GP, nurse or pharmacist will generally not give you a prescription for over-the-counter (OTC) medicines for a range of minor health conditions.

Prescribing for clinical need

Our local Clinical Commissioning Group have developed a policy which may mean that we do not prescribe certain items which are not true medicines or are available cheaply from pharmacies and other retail outlets. The information regarding these medications can be found in the document below.

Your Home Medicine Cupboard

It is well worth keeping a small stock of useful medicines at home in your (locked) first aid cupboard. For instance, pain killers (analgesics) such as Paracetamol, Ibuprofen or aspirin (children under 16 and people with asthma should not take aspirin), or Ibuprofen syrups  for children, Mild laxatives, Anti-diarrhoeal medicines, Indigestion remedy (for example, antacids) Travel sickness tablets, and Sunscreen – SPF15 or higher Sunburn treatment (for example, calamine). For more detail see NHS UK Medicine Chest.