Private Prescriptions
Private prescriptions are medication which your private Doctor has recommended for you on a private prescription. A private prescription is not written on an official NHS prescription and so is not paid for by the NHS. The cost of a private prescription is met wholly by the patient and is dictated by the cost of the medicine plus the pharmacists charge for supplying it. A prescription is a legal document for which the doctor, who has issued and signed it, is responsible for. Therefore, a NHS doctor cannot convert a private prescription to an NHS prescription. A doctor you see privately can’t issue an NHS prescription.
A GP in the surgery at which you are registered can only provide a private prescription if the drug is not available on the NHS.
Related pages
- Launch of Online Prescription Request Service
- Quick Patient Guide to SystmOnline Access
- Electronic Prescription Service (EPS)
- Emergency Prescription
- Out of Hours Medicines
- Over The Counter
- Prescribing Wisely
- Your Home Medicine Cupboard
- Hospital Outpatient Prescriptions
- Medication Reviews
- Synchronising Medicines
- Medications Abroad