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Pharmacy Analytics
GPhC Owner: Pharmaniks First Ltd
Contractor Trading Name: RUSHTON PHARMACY
Contractor Name: PHARMANIKS FIRST LIMITED
HWB: BRENT
Region: LONDON
Code: FE042
Type: PHARMACY
Full Address
275-277 PRESTON ROAD, HARROW, HA3 0PS
Contact Information
Telephone
020 89046145Contractor/Dispenser Details
Contractor Name
PHARMANIKS FIRST LIMITED
Contractor Type
SINGLE CONTRACTOR
Dispenser Account Type
English Pharmacy
Health and Wellbeing Board (HWB)
BRENT
Local Pharmaceutical Committee (LPC)
BRENT & HARROW LPC
Region
LONDON
GPHC Registration Details
Pharmacy Registration Number
1034997
Trading Name
Rushton Pharmacy
Owner Name
Pharmaniks First LtdPremises Type
Community
Status
Registered
Registration Dates
Initial Registration: 1988-10-31
Renewal Date: 2026-10-31
Expiry Date: 2026-12-31
GPHC Registered Address
275-277 Preston Road, HARROW, Middlesex, HA30PS, England
Region: London
What are GPhC inspection reports?
The General Pharmaceutical Council (GPhC) inspects registered pharmacies against five standards. Reports show whether the pharmacy met the standards, with improvement or enforcement action where needed. Premises ID is the same as the pharmacy's GPhC registration number.
Inspection outcome
Standards met
Last inspection
28/06/2023
Pharmacy context
This is a high street pharmacy in a mixed commercial and residential area in northwest London. It dispenses NHS and private prescriptions and provides health advice. Services include delivery, flu and travel vaccinations, blood pressure case finding service, new medicine service, discharge medicines service and community pharmacist consultation service (CPCS). The pharmacy supplies medicines in multi‐compartment compliance packs for people who have difficulty managing their medicines. The pharmacy changed ownership in March 2023.
Standards by principle
Principle 1 – Governance
Standards met
Overall, the pharmacy’s working practices are generally safe and effective. The pharmacy team members follow suitable written instructions to help them manage risks and work safely. They record their mistakes to learn from them and take appropriate action to help prevent the same mistakes happening again. The pharmacy keeps all the records it needs to by law, and this shows that medicines are supplied safely and legally. The pharmacy team members keep people’s private information safe and understand how they can help safeguard the welfare of vulnerable people.
Principle 2 – Staff
Standards met
The pharmacy team members work well together to manage the workload. And they feel able to make suggestions to the pharmacist on how to improve the pharmacy and its services. The pharmacy enrols members of its team on training courses relevant to their roles so they can develop their skills and knowledge.
Principle 3 – Premises
Standards met
The pharmacy’s premises are secure and suitable for the provision of healthcare. The pharmacy protects people’s private information and keeps the pharmacy’s medicines stock safe.
Principle 4 – Services
Standards met
The pharmacy tries to make sure its services are easily accessible to people with different needs. Its working practices are generally safe and effective. The pharmacy team members highlight prescriptions for high‐risk medicines so they can make sure people get the information they need to use them properly. And the pharmacy obtains its medicines from reputable sources so they are fit for purpose. The pharmacy stores medicines securely at the right temperature and it keeps records of regular checks to show medicines are safe to use. The pharmacy team knows what to do if any medicines or devices need to be returned to the suppliers.
Principle 5 – Equipment
Standards met
The pharmacy has the equipment and facilities it needs for the services it offers. The pharmacy uses its equipment appropriately to keep people's private information safe.
Reports & documents (newest first)
Inspection history summary
| Inspection date | Published | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| 28/06/2023 | 01/08/2023 | Standards met |
Integrated Care Board
NHS NORTH WEST LONDON INTEGRATED CARE BOARD
Code: E54000027
English Index of Multiple Deprivation (IMD)
Understanding IMD
The Index of Multiple Deprivation (IMD) measures relative deprivation across England. It ranks all 33,755 LSOAs (England, 2021 boundaries) from most deprived (rank 1) to least deprived (rank 33,755).
Key Points:
Lower Layer Super Output Area (LSOA)
Brent 006E
Code: E01000487
Overall Deprivation
Rank 11,048
of 33,755 LSOAs in England (2021)
67.3%
Percentile
Moderate Deprivation
This area is in the middle range of deprivation
Moderate levels of deprivation with mixed socioeconomic characteristics
Quintile (5 groups)
2
of 5
Very Deprived
Middle - 20-40%
Decile (10 groups)
4
of 10
Mid-range
Middle - 20-40%
Deprivation by Domain
Lower ranks = higher deprivation. Domains weighted differently in overall IMD.
Income
22.5%Rank 7,322
78th percentile
Proportion of people experiencing low income and benefits
Employment
22.5%Rank 13,541
60th percentile
Unemployment and worklessness among working-age people
Health
13.5%Rank 25,813
24th percentile
Health conditions, disability, and premature mortality
Education
13.5%Rank 13,583
60th percentile
Lack of school qualifications and skills
Crime
9.3%Rank 12,418
63rd percentile
Recorded crime and disorder incidents
Housing Barriers
9.3%Rank 3,027
91st percentile
Housing affordability and access to services
Living Environment
9.3%Rank 11,698
65th percentile
Housing quality and air quality
Last Updated
4 March 2026
All data is updated monthly from official NHS sources, ensuring you always have access to the latest information.
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