News1 min ago
Nhs Paperless Prescriptions.
39 Answers
Not a question more for information. Prompted by a question on repeat prescriptions.
http:// systems .hscic. gov.uk/ eps
All NHS prescriptions will soon be paperless , electronically transmitted direct to your choice of Pharmacy.
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All NHS prescriptions will soon be paperless , electronically transmitted direct to your choice of Pharmacy.
Answers
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No best answer has yet been selected by EDDIE51. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.danny, are you in England? Last month I ordered my repeat prescription. When I collected it from the surgery all it had was Tramadol. When I asked where the rest were I was told that they had been sent electronically but they couldn't do that with the Tramadol as either I or the chemist had to sign for it.
I understand that the Spanish Salud (NHS)does not have the same high standards of the NHS (UK) but for a least 5 years or possibly more, your medication is stored electronically on your health card, which is like a small credit card) which you can take to any pharmacist in Spanish territories to obtain your drugs.
I see many posts on here mentioning "repeat prescriptions". Here, in Ontario, a great many doctors will not give you repeats. For example, I take four different pills for high BP, and he wants to see me every three months to give me a check over, and then he will give me a new prescription to last another three months.
Same sort of system in the UK Stuey. Some prescriptions need a regular review and won't be issued without a visit to the GP. My wife has to have an annual review for her BP since it's been consistent for many years. If you have a change of dose or a change in circumstances fewer advance prescriptions will be issued.
That's an interesting way of doing it Stuey. Each of my wife's prescriptions has all her items on it (2 for BP, 2 for eye problem), so she gets 12 prescriptions each with 4 items on it. No-one in the NHS seems to realise that there are 13 lunar months in a year, so 12 prescriptions only last 11 calendar months.
Danny - my wife's are all for 28 days' supply of tablets or bottles of eye-drops which should be binned after 28 days' use, so no 2-month size available.
I think the NHS system is designed such that if you pop your clogs before the next prescription issue there is never more than 1 month's supply of medication wasted.
Danny - my wife's are all for 28 days' supply of tablets or bottles of eye-drops which should be binned after 28 days' use, so no 2-month size available.
I think the NHS system is designed such that if you pop your clogs before the next prescription issue there is never more than 1 month's supply of medication wasted.
Tramadol are a controlled drug so have to be signed for.
I order my own and husbands prescriptions online every 4 weeks. Its sent electronically to the Pharmacy and delivered to our door a few days later.
Not always as ideal as it sounds as for some reason the secretaries dealing with prescriptions often include items we haven't used in a while but not removed from the list.
If we send them back were told they can't re-issue that item as its left the Pharmacy.
I am quite happy to purchase simple painkillers over the counter as well as sun creams etc. A lot of waste comes from the surgery itself not always the patients..IMO
I order my own and husbands prescriptions online every 4 weeks. Its sent electronically to the Pharmacy and delivered to our door a few days later.
Not always as ideal as it sounds as for some reason the secretaries dealing with prescriptions often include items we haven't used in a while but not removed from the list.
If we send them back were told they can't re-issue that item as its left the Pharmacy.
I am quite happy to purchase simple painkillers over the counter as well as sun creams etc. A lot of waste comes from the surgery itself not always the patients..IMO
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