| The Cornwall Road Medical
Practice 3 Frederick Treves House St John Way Dorchester DT1 2FD 01305 251128 |

Repeat prescriptions allow patients to obtain further supplies of their regular medicines without seeing the doctor or nurse every time.
When the doctor and patient agree that long-term treatment is going to be required, the medicines needed will usually be entered on the computer as 'Repeat medication' and a list should appear on the paper to the right of the standard prescription form.
This 'right side' is a useful reminder of your usual treatment (take it with you on holiday or if you have an appointment at hospital). At the bottom there is a 'Review' date. This is a prompt to doctor and patient the date shown the need for the prescription or the dosage should be reconsidered.
As a general rule everyone on repeat medication should be seen at the Practice at least once a year, for some people the interval will be shorter.
If your medication has been changed, for instance at a hospital clinic, it is important to let us know who made the changes and when.
In addition to the agreed and authorised repeat prescriptions, we will sometimes repeat a treatment that has previously been effective. This is always at the discretion of the doctor and cannot be guaranteed.
For the system to be safe it is important to make a number of checks before the prescription is prepared and checked by your usual doctor or whoever started the treatment.
We aim to have prescriptions ready to collect within 2 working weekdays of the request reaching us.
Requests for drugs that are not recognised as repeat treatment (i.e. they are not on the 'right side' sheet) may take longer to process as they require additional checking.
| Prescription request reaches Practice | Prescription ready to collect |
|---|---|
| Monday | Wednesday after 2.00pm |
| Tuesday | Thursday after 2.00pm |
| Wednesday | Friday after 2.00pm |
| Thursday | Monday after 2.00pm |
| Friday | Tuesday after 2.00pm |
| Prescriptions placed over the weekend will be dealt with on Monday morning | Tuesday after 2.00pm |
In exceptional circumstances if you find you have run short of your medicine please speak to one of the reception staff and we will try to fast-track your request.
All the local pharmacists will collect the completed prescriptions from the surgery and some offer a delivery service too.
|
By post |
Please use the'Right side' and address your letter to Repeat Prescriptions at The Practice address |
|
By phone |
For straightforward repeats please use our prescription line number Dorchester (01305) 217037. Please speak clearly. |
|
In person |
Use the 'right side' of your previous prescription and mark the items you require, or complete one of the slips in the waiting room. There is a letter-box at the entrance for these slips. |
|
By fax |
You can fax request to us on Dorchester (01305) 250837 |
|
By email |
We hope to start this facility as soon as a secure and integrated system is available. |
| Via your Pharmacist | If you go to the same pharmacist all the time, he or she will be able to order your medication for you. |
It is important that you check the written prescription and the drugs supplied by either the pharmacist or Practice dispensary.
If it is not what you were expecting please contact us as soon as possible.
We prescribe almost all drugs by their 'approved' or 'generic' name that accurately describes the active ingredients. This is the name that should appear on the printed pharmacy label with your name and the date.
However the packaging of some drugs also emphasises the manufacturer's or 'brand name' which is often different.
Sometimes a different brand of the same drug is supplied by the pharmacist. If you have any worries that this may not be the same actual drug, please check this with the pharmacy or dispensary you collected from.
We prescribe almost all medicines to last for one month's treatment. This is in line with both the local and national policy to reduce the millions of pounds wasted in unused medicines that have to be thrown away each year.
The exceptions are those treatments that are prescribed in longer cycles and packaged in that way.