Pharmacy Contraception Service (PCS) – FAQs

Published on: 22nd November 2023 | Updated on: 22nd October 2025

This page contains the answers to Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) posed by pharmacy owners and LPCs on the Pharmacy Contraception Service (PCS).


Click on a heading below for more information

Background and general

Q. Is community pharmacy able to initiate oral contraceptives as part of the service?
Yes. Initially the service involved community pharmacists providing ongoing management of routine oral contraception (OC) that was initiated in general practice or a sexual health clinic. The service was subsequently extended to enable community pharmacists to also initiate oral contraception, via a patient group direction (PGD), and provide ongoing clinical checks and annual reviews.

Q. Is provision of emergency contraception part of the PCS service specification?
Yes. From point the service is expanded (this is currently planned as 29th October 2025) provision of oral emergency contraception (EC) will be part of PCS and competence around EC was already part of the requirement of the service. The supply of EC could also be an opportunity to discuss initiation of regular contraception with the individual.

Q. If we do not want to provide oral EC, can we continue to just provide on-going supplies and initiation of OC only?
No. With the extension of the service, the amended service specification requires pharmacy owners to offer consultations for EC as well as for both initiation of OC and for ongoing supply of OC.

Pharmacy owners who do not wish to provide oral EC will need to deregister from the service via the NHS Business Services Authority’s (NHSBSA) Manage Your Service (MYS) portal and provide 30-days notice prior to cessation of the service.

Q. Is provision of the service mandatory?
No. This is an Advanced service, so pharmacy owners are free to choose if they wish to provide the service.

Q. Can distance selling pharmacies provide the PCS?
Yes but a distance selling pharmacy (DSP) can only provide the service remotely. From 1st October 2025, DSP pharmacies can no longer provide Directed services (Advanced, National Enhanced and Enhanced Services)* face-to-face with the patient at the pharmacy premises. The DSP must fully meet the requirements for the provision of the PCS, which includes the requirements related to remote consultations.

* DSP pharmacies can continue to provide COVID-19 and Flu vaccination services at the pharmacy premises, as part of an Advanced, National Enhanced, or Enhanced service, until 31st March 2026.

Q. Do I need to update NHS Profile Manager to say the pharmacy is now providing the PCS?
Yes. NHS Profile Manager will need to be updated to indicate that the service is provided, as this is a service that individuals, general practice, sexual health clinics (or equivalent) or NHS 111 can refer themselves/people into. A service finder, on the NHS website, also lets members of the public and healthcare professionals search for a pharmacy that offers the service and this tool is informed by the information on your NHS profile.

Q. Can we advertise or promote the PCS?
Yes. The service can be actively promoted to the public by pharmacy owners. Resources to support this can be found in the Resources section of the Community Pharmacy England PCS webpage.

Q. What insurance should you have for the PCS?
Advice should be sought from your indemnity insurance provider.

Prior to service commencement

Q. Are there any resources available to support the engagement of general practice teams and sexual health clinics?
Yes. A general practice and a sexual health clinic Briefing and an infographic on the service are available on our PCS webpage.

Q. My pharmacy has an exemption from NHS England on the requirement to have a consultation room. Can I, therefore, provide the service from a designated area in the pharmacy or outside my pharmacy?
No. It is a requirement of the service specification for pharmacies to have a consultation room which meets the requirements in the Terms of Service to provide the service.

Q. Is there an IT system to support the service?
Yes. Pharmacy owners must provide the service using an NHS-assured IT solution that meet the minimum digital requirements of the service. A list of the current options is available via our webpage about Pharmacy services IT requirements.

An application programming interface (API) to facilitate transfer of data into the NHSBSA’s MYS platform to support claims for payment has been developed and will assist the automatic submission of data on service provision and claims for payment.

Q. Will NHS England cover the cost of procurement of an appropriate IT system to provide the service?
No. Procurement of IT systems to support the service is the responsibility of the pharmacy owner.

Q. If a pharmacy does not have a consultation room but has access to an appropriate room twice a week are they still ineligible for the service?
Yes. It is a requirement of the service specification for pharmacies to have a consultation room on the pharmacy premises which meets the requirements in the Terms of Service to provide the service.

Q. Are there any additional requirements to consider beyond those of the Terms of Service for our consultation room?
Yes, as blood pressure measurements may need to be undertaken, the consultation room should also comply with the following requirements:

  • when measuring blood pressure, the person must be able to rest their arm on a table / bench at a suitable height; and
  • it must have IT equipment accessible within the consultation room to allow contemporaneous records of the consultations provided as part of this service to be made.

Q. Do I need to provide the service for all the hours that my pharmacy is open?
Pharmacy owners should, wherever possible, provide the EC element of the service for all the hours that their pharmacy is open. For initiation and ongoing supply of OC, pharmacy owners can decide when these elements of the service will be provided during their opening hours.

Q. What do you advise to those pharmacists or pharmacy technicians not wishing to provide the service on moral or ethical grounds?
The General Pharmaceutical Council (GPhC) has previously produced guidance on religion, personal values and beliefs. All pharmacy professionals and pharmacy owners are encouraged to be familiar with this guidance to support their provision of good decisions and person-centred care.

GPhC guidance on religion, personal values and beliefs | General Pharmaceutical Council (pharmacyregulation.org)

When EC is added to the PCS, EC will become a part of the service that any pharmacy registered to provide the service must provide. If a pharmacy owner does not wish to provide that element of the service, they will need to de-register from provision of the service. De-registration from the service will mean that they will not meet the Pharmacy First bundling requirements.

There are no provisions in the bundling requirements to exempt a pharmacy from providing PCS on religious or moral grounds. The GPhC guidance regarding religious, personal values and beliefs sets an expectation that the pharmacist or pharmacy technician takes responsibility for ensuring that person-centred care is not compromised. It is, therefore, important for pharmacy owners to ensure they have had appropriate discussions with the pharmacy professionals who have registered objections to provision of the service.

 

Who can provide the service?

Q. Can pharmacy staff other than a pharmacist provide the service?
Pharmacy technicians with the appropriate competence can also provide consultations for and supplies of oral EC, initiation and ongoing supplies of OC under the authority of PGDs. Where body mass index and blood pressure measurements are performed within the pharmacy, these can be conducted by the pharmacist or pharmacy technician as part of the consultation or by a suitably trained and competent member of the pharmacy staff in advance of the consultation.

Q. Can trainee pharmacists provide this service?
No. Only pharmacists and pharmacy technicians can provide supplies of OC and oral EC as part the service. Trainee pharmacists that are suitably trained and competent can provide body mass index and blood pressure measurements, where needed, in advance of the consultation.

Q. If I am providing the PCS from a DSP and the individual does not know their BMI or blood pressure, can they come to the pharmacy for a blood pressure check and so I can weigh them and measure their height to calculate their BMI for them?
No. If the individual needs to be seen face-to-face to have measurements taken, the individual should be referred to a bricks and mortar pharmacy or another healthcare professional for advice; they cannot come to the DSP premises for a PCS consultation.

Equipment and IT to be used in the service

Q. We have a BP monitor described as recommended by NICE but it is not validated by the British and Irish Hypertension Society. Can we use this for blood pressure measurements as part of the service?
No. Blood pressure monitors used to provide the service must be validated by the British and Irish Hypertension Society.

Q. Will any equipment be provided to support the service?
No. The responsibility of purchasing equipment to provide the service sits with the pharmacy owner.

Q. How often does calibration of the equipment need to occur?
The calibration of equipment used to provide the service should be conducted in line with the manufacturer’s instructions.

Q. Is there a recommended IT provider I should use?
No. Each NHS-assured IT system has been tested by NHS England and the NHSBSA, to ensure the minimum digital requirements of the service have been met. We cannot recommend or influence the choice of IT system that a pharmacy owner chooses to use. This is a commercial decision for each pharmacy owner to individually make.

Q. Can I choose not to use an IT system when providing the service?
No. Pharmacy owners must use an NHS-assured IT system to support the PCS.

What do pharmacy owners need to do to provide the service?

Q. Do pharmacy staff providing the service have to complete all the appropriate training listed in the service specification to provide the service?
No. The service specification requires pharmacy owners to ensure that pharmacists, pharmacy technicians and any pharmacy staff providing any aspect of the service are competent to do so in line with the specific skills and knowledge in the service specification and the relevant PGDs.

Q. Is there any mandatory training required as part of service provision?
Yes, pharmacists and pharmacy technicians providing the service must have completed one of the recommended Safeguarding Level 3 training options OR have direct access to professional advice from someone who can advise on Safeguarding at Level 3.

Q. Is there a specific competency assessment that I must use for the service?
No, pharmacists and pharmacy technicians are free to choose how they demonstrate competency and options that could be considered, are available on the Community Pharmacy England PCS webpage.

Q. Is there a defined period after which training or competency assessments need to be repeated?
No. Pharmacists and pharmacy technicians providing the service will be personally responsible for remaining up to date with the skills and competencies identified in the service specification and associated PGDs.

Q. How do pharmacy owners sign up to provide the PCS?
Pharmacy owners can sign up to provide the service by completing a registration declaration on the NHSBSA’s MYS portal.

Eligibility to receive the service

Q. What people are eligible to access the service?
To be eligible to access this service a person must be:

  • An individual of childbearing potential seeking a supply of oral EC only, following confirmation of unprotected sexual intercourse or where regular contraception has been compromised or used incorrectly; OR
  • An individual seeking to be initiated on an OC, to restart an OC or seeking to obtain a further supply of their ongoing OC in line with the PGD protocol, and as follows:
  • For combined oral contraceptive (COC) – age from menarche to up to and including 49 years of age; or
  • For progestogen only pill (POP) – age from menarche up to and including 54 years of age except for Drospirenone which is from menarche up to and including 49 years.

Q. How will I know that a person is due for a review or subsequent supply of OC?
Pharmacists and pharmacy technicians are encouraged where they have previously provided an OC supply to check the person’s patient medication record or where a supply was not made at the pharmacy, to check the individual’s last dispensed medication record via the National Care Record Service. If still unsure, the pharmacy could contact the person’s general practice or sexual health clinic to confirm, where applicable.

Q. If an individual has had a gap in their OC cycle, can we still make a supply of their original prescription as part of this service?
Yes. As the service includes initiation of OC, people who have had a gap (of any duration in length) in their OC cycle, can be re-initiated on their original contraceptive as part of this service.

Q. Are individuals who may not be registered with a general practice eligible for this service?
Yes. Where an individual is identified as suitable for the service, but is not registered with a general practice, the service can still be provided. The individual should be provided with the results of any biometrics measurements undertaken and with information on how to register with a local practice.

Q. Can we offer this service to people under 16 years of age?
Individuals under 16 years of age who meet the inclusion criteria for the service and are assessed as competent using Fraser Guidelines can be provided the service. If the individual is less than 13 years of age, the pharmacist or pharmacy technician should speak to the local safeguarding lead and follow the local safeguarding policy. 

Q. Can we supply an oral contraceptive if the individual is not using it for contraceptive purposes, e.g. if they are taking it to regulate their periods, or for acne?
No. The service is a contraception service and the inclusion criteria for the service do not include other uses such as the management of bleeding, management of acne etc. The PGDs can only be used to provide supplies to individuals wishing to obtain an oral contraceptive for contraception purposes. Individuals seeking oral contraceptives for other conditions, should be referred to their general practice.

Q. Can individuals who do not live in England (for example, individuals visiting from Northern Ireland, Scotland or Wales, or from abroad) access the Pharmacy Contraception Service?
Yes; such people could be referred to the service by a GP, sexual health clinic, NHS 111 or a UTC. Alternatively, when the person is in England, they could walk in/contact a pharmacy to access the service.

Q. Can an individual get an advance supply of oral EC via the service?
No. The service excludes all advance supplies of oral EC.

Q. Can asylum seekers access the service?
Yes, asylum seekers can access the service; they have access to primary medical services and can also access services like PCS, Pharmacy First and the Hypertension Case-Finding Service.

Q. Can someone use the service to request OC or oral EC on behalf of anther person?
No. All consultations must be directly with the person accessing the service, and for whom the medication is for.

Providing the service

Q. How will people know about this service?
Public-facing promotional materials for community pharmacies, sexual health clinics and general practices are downloadable from the PCS service page.

Q. What is the recommended retention period for the consultation records in this service?
Records of the reimbursement data reported to the NHSBSA’s MYS portal should be retained for three years for post payment verification (PPV) purposes. No retention period has been specified within the service specification for the consultation records, so it would be for the pharmacy owner, as the data controller, to decide on retention periods beyond the requirements related to remuneration.

Pharmacy owners should ensure any retention periods are be in line with Records Management Code of Practice for Health and Social Care. This retention period may be beyond the specified period for PPV purposes and should be in line both the requirements for the record type and if the record relates to a child.

Q. Can I provide the service off-site?
No.

Q. Can the service be provided remotely?
Yes, remote consultations are permitted to be used to provide the service where assessed as clinically appropriate by the pharmacist or pharmacy technician.

When undertaking remote consultations, the pharmacy owner must ensure that the requirements of the service specification related to remote provision have been met, including that there are arrangements in place at the pharmacy which enable staff to communicate confidentially with the person receiving the service by telephone or another live audio link and via a live video link.

Q. Do I have to provide the person’s general practice with the outcomes of their consultation?
If the person provides consent to share the outcome of the consultation with their general practice, a notification will be sent as a structured message in real-time by the approved clinical services IT system.

Q. How does a pharmacy confirm the NHSmail address for a general practice they do not usually communicate with?
Pharmacies can use the NHS Service Finder to look-up non-public email and non-public telephone numbers (where available) for general practices. Pharmacies should then confirm with the practice that the identified email address is suitable as a secure email that they can use to send notifications or referrals to.

Q. Has communication taken place with general practice and sexual health clinics to make them aware of this community pharmacy service?
Yes. NHS England has engaged representatives of general practice and sexual health clinics about the service requirements and has worked with the General Practitioners Committee (GPC) of the British Medical Association. Community Pharmacy England will also discuss the service with the GPC and resources to help brief general practice and sexual health clinic teams on the service and regarding changes to the service are available on our PCS webpage.

Q. If I have a safeguarding concern regarding an individual accessing the service, who should I contact?
If a pharmacist or pharmacy technician is concerned about a potential safeguarding issue, then they should contact their local safeguarding team and follow any appropriate action, where necessary, in line with local processes. Ahead of provision of the service, pharmacy owners should confirm that the contact details of local safeguarding teams are documented and available for pharmacists and pharmacy technicians  to refer to in the pharmacy.

Q. I have discussed the option of long-acting reversible contraception (LARC) with the individual and they wish to take up this option. Where do I refer them to?
Ahead of provision of the service, pharmacy owners should confirm clinic locations that individuals who want a LARC can be referred to locally. Pharmacies can use the NHS Service Finder to look-up local sexual health service provider locations (where available) to be able to highlight these to the individual. The individual’s general practice may also be able to provide LARCs. It may be suitable to provide bridging OC to meet the individual’s immediate contraception needs until they are able to get an appointment.

Q. Can referrals to the service be made from other NHS service providers other than general practice and sexual health clinics?
Yes, however, there is no requirement to make formal referrals to the service.  General practices, sexual health clinics and other NHS service providers can simply signpost individuals to the PCS.

Q. If a person refuses to have the consultation outcomes shared with their general practice, can they still access the service?
Yes. Where an individual does not consent to consultation outcomes being shared with their general practice, no notification information should be sent.

Q. Do I need to undertake blood pressure and body mass index (BMI) checks for all consultations?
No. BMI and blood pressure measurements are only required for initiation and ongoing repeat supplies for combined oral hormonal contraception which is in line with NICE guideline 136. For a supply of oral EC, in some circumstances, there may be a need to confirm a person’s BMI or for a measurement of their weight to be taken.

Q. Where a blood pressure reading, weight, height and/or a BMI is provided by an individual but is not recent, can the pharmacist or pharmacy technician reject these and request updated readings are undertaken?
Yes. While a person accessing the service may offer their own weight, height, BMI and blood pressure measurements, it is for the pharmacist or pharmacy technician providing the service to determine if these are clinically appropriate and whether these may need to be updated.

Q. Do pharmacists or pharmacy technicians have to undertake blood pressure, weight and height measurements and/or BMI calculations or can another pharmacy team member perform these?
Where BMI and blood pressure measurements are performed within the pharmacy, these can be conducted by the pharmacist or pharmacy technician as part of the consultation or by suitably trained and competent pharmacy staff in advance of the consultation.

Q. Our local practices only usually provide six months of OC. Do we need to stick to the same duration of treatment?
No. On initiation, the quantity of OC supplied should not exceed 3 months. Following initiation, ongoing supplies of an OC should be for a minimum of 6 month’s supply, unless there are clinical reasons not to. Repeat supplies of up to 12 months duration can be made, and unless there are reasons not to, such a duration of supply should be considered in line with the College of Sexual and Reproductive Healthcare (CoSRH) guidance*.

* The Faculty of Sexual and Reproductive Healthcare (FSRH) has now changed its name to the College of Sexual and Reproductive Healthcare (CoSRH). Some pages and documents will continue to display the FSRH name. Where you see FSRH, this refers to CoSRH.

FSRH Clinical Guideline: Combined Hormonal Contraception (January 2019, Amended October 2023)

FSRH Clinical Guideline: Progestogen-only Pills (August 2022, Amended July 2023)

Q. Our local system is concerned that issuing 12 months of OC may result in medicines waste and have suggested pharmacies only issue six months at a time. Do we need to adhere to local system guidance on the duration of treatment for this service?
CoSRH guidance advises that up to 12 months duration can be made, unless there are reasons not to. Supplies should depend on the person’s preference and their anticipated use. Restriction of the length of supply could result in unwanted discontinuation of the method and increased risk of pregnancy. Although there could be some potential wastage, the cost and use of resource associated with frequent follow-up appointments are avoided.

Q. Is there a restriction on the number of times an individual can come back for a repeat of the service?
No. Individuals can continue to used the service for as long as they continue to meet the inclusion criteria for the service and a supply is confirmed as clinically appropriate by the pharmacist or pharmacy technician providing the service. Supplied quantities of OC should conform to the requirements of the service specification. Supplies of OC at initiation should not exceed 3 months and following initiation, ongoing supplies of an OC should be for a minimum of 6 month’s supply, unless there are clinical reasons not to.

Q. If an individual chooses to use the service, will there be any impact to their registration with their general practice if this was the only current service they accessed from their general practice?
No. Use of the service supports reduction of workload in general practices and allows greater opportunities for general practice colleagues to focus on more complex cases.

Q. Do I have to supply the same brand of OC as the person had in their initial supply?
No. It is recommended that repeat supplies should be made in line with the person’s previous supply, e.g. in the instance that a branded product has been supplied for clinical reasons such as an allergy to product constituents. However, if there are supply issues with the original brand, the repeat supply can be made from an equivalent brand/generic equivalent of OC. Pharmacy owners should follow any medicines formulary requirements of their local integrated care board.

Q. Do the PGDs cover supplies for all oral contraceptives listed in CoSRH guidance?
No. The PGD for COC does not include Cyproterone with ethinylestradiol (co-cyprindiol (Dianette)). This is licensed as a second-line treatment for women with severe acne or moderately severe hirsutism. Co-cyprindiol provides effective contraception in women who require it to treat androgen-sensitive conditions, but it should not be used solely as a contraceptive has therefore, not been included in the PGD.

Q. Is there any guidance on when the next cycle of OC can be supplied before the current one is complete?
No. There is no specific guidance. It is down to a professional decision made by the supplying pharmacist or pharmacy technician.

Q. Where a patient presents a prescription for oral EC or an OC, can you provide the service instead of dispensing the prescription?
No. This is prohibited by the service. When a person attends the pharmacy to collect an NHS prescription for oral EC or OC, while the pharmacy can highlight the PCS service for the individual to consider for future supplies, the service must not be offered at that time as an alternative to dispensing the person’s NHS prescription. There has already been an NHS cost associated with the time to issue the prescription, and this should not be wasted.

Q. With reference to the upper age limits – what happens if you are conducting a consultation for someone just before they have a birthday that would exclude them from supply? For example, if someone is due to turn 55 next month, can you still supply 12 months of a POP?
The PGD inclusion criteria have clear age restrictions. Pharmacists and pharmacy technicians are expected to follow these. The CoSRH guidance for contraception over 40 years of age outlines the following:

  • Once women reach 50 years of age, they should no longer use combined hormonal contraception (CHC) due to greater risks compared to oestrogen-free methods, which are at least as effective for contraception at this stage;
  • Women over 50 years of age should also be encouraged to choose an alternative to the progestogen-only injectable (depot medroxyprogesterone acetate, DMPA) due to concerns around bone health; and
  • Progestogen-only pills (POP), progestogen-only implants (IMP), levonorgestrel intrauterine systems (LNG-IUS), and copper intrauterine devices (Cu-IUD) can safely be used until the age of 55 years, when natural loss of fertility can be assumed, and may confer non-contraceptive benefits (e.g., reduced menstrual pain/bleeding, endometrial protection).

Q. Can I just get an individual who wants a supply of OC or oral EC to just complete a form or digital form before I make a supply?
No. The service specification requires that all consultations (face-to-face or remote) should be verbal and must be provided from the pharmacy premises. The use of purely digital asynchronous consultations (e.g. text based digital consultations) is not permitted.

Q. My ICB formulary does not include Drospirenone, can I still provide it as part of the service?
Yes. Drospirenone is now listed on the progesterone only pill (POP) PGD.

Q. Am I required to check the individual’s GP record before I consider a supply via PCS?
Yes. The service specification now requires, with the person’s consent, that their GP record (e.g. via GP Connect Access Record), national care record, or an alternative clinical record, is checked by the pharmacist or pharmacy technician as part of the consultation unless there are exceptional circumstances preventing this.

Funding and claiming payment

Q. What does the set-up fee cover?
The set-up fee covers costs including creating an SOP for the service and training staff who will be involved in providing the service.

Q. How often should claims be made for the service?
Claims for payment should be submitted within one month of, and no later than three months from the claim period for the chargeable activity provided. Later claims will not be paid, unless the submission of a claim was delayed by IT issues outside the contractor’s control (such as issues with the NHS approved API system used by the contractor or with the MYS portal). Such claims will be accepted outside the usual grace period within twelve months of the date by which the claim should have been submitted. This is subject to the NHSBSA receiving evidence of the IT issue, and only if investigation finds that the evidence demonstrates that the IT issue was outside the control of the contractor, and it delayed the claim submission.

Q. Where the pharmacy undertakes a blood pressure check as part of the PCS, can we claim a hypertension case-finding service clinic blood pressure fee as well as a fee for the PCS consultation?
No. Pharmacy owners may not claim twice for the same activity.

Q. Where the pharmacy undertakes a blood pressure check as part of the PCS and identifies that the person has high blood pressure, can the pharmacy offer ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) and be remunerated for this if they also offer the hypertension case-finding service?
Yes. Where an individual is identified through provision of a blood pressure measurement during PCS as having high blood pressure and the pharmacy also offers the hypertension case-finding service and the individual meets the inclusion criteria, then the second stage of this service can be offered. In this instance, where the person accepts the provision of ABPM, the pharmacy owner can claim a fee associated with provision of the ABPM, but not for the clinic blood pressure measurement.

The person will need to be referred for an alternative contraceptive in this instance, as this is an exclusion criterion in the appropriate PGD for the PCS.

Q. If a pharmacist or pharmacy technician decides it is not clinically appropriate to make a supply of an OC or oral EC, can a consultation fee still be claimed?
Yes. The consultation fee is to fund the time associated with provision of the consultation and is not dependent on the outcome of the consultation. It is also important to remember that where no items are supplied to the person, that the reason for not making a supply is captured within the clinical record for the service.

Q. If I conduct a PCS consultation and the patient decides to opt for LARC, so you refer them to a GP or other sexual health provider, can I still claim for that consultation?
Yes. Where a patient opts for LARC following a PCS consultation, the consultation fee is to fund the time associated with provision of the consultation and is not dependent on the outcome of the consultation. ‘No Supply’ is a viable outcome of the consultation, and the pharmacy would be paid for this consultation. It is also important to remember that where no items are supplied to the person, that the reason for not making a supply is captured within the clinical record for the service. There is an option to record the reason for no supply in the consultation record.

Q. If I get an NHS 111 referral for urgent supply for an oral contraceptive, can I process the urgent supply under Pharmacy First and mark it as ‘not supplied’ then transfer the patient onto the PCS to supply the medicine?
No. Either the Pharmacy First referral should be rejected and a note added to confirm that the patient was support using the PCS, or the Pharmacy First referral should be accepted and an appropriate urgent supply provided, if appropriate. The service specification prohibits pharmacy owners from claiming twice for the same activity.

Q. If there are manufacturing problems or a change in demand, resulting in an OC only being available above the set Drug Tariff price, where the OC is supplied as part of PCS, is reimbursement in line with any concession price granted?
Yes. Where a price concession has been granted for specific strengths of a product, this concession will apply to those specific strengths of products supplied as part of this service. Concessions will only apply to the month in which they are granted according to the usual Drug Tariff arrangements.

Q. Do people using the service have to complete any exemption declarations?
No. Prescription charges are not relevant to the provision of this service and an appropriate patient declaration is not required.

Q. Where do the medicines costs for the service get charged back to?
The medicines costs will be charged to the appropriate integrated care board medicines budget.

Withdrawal from the service

Q. Can we temporarily switch off the service if we need to due to heavy workload, e.g. holiday times, flu season?
Where a pharmacy owner needs to temporarily suspend the service, they will need to update their service availability on the service profile of the NHS website using NHS Profile Manager. They should also inform their general practices and local sexual health clinics of the temporary suspension and provide some indication of when the service will recommence.

Q. How do I withdraw from provision of the service?
Pharmacy owners can withdraw from the service by providing 30-days notice and completing the PCS withdrawn from service form on the MYS application.

Return to the PCS hub page

 

For more information on this topic please email services.team@cpe.org.uk

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