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Pharmacy Analytics
GPhC Owner: KQ Pharma Ltd
Contractor Trading Name: STAR PHARMACY
Contractor Name: KQ PHARMA LTD
HWB: LEEDS
Region: NORTH EAST AND YORKSHIRE
Code: FTX25
Type: PHARMACY
Full Address
136 CARDIGAN ROAD, LEEDS, WEST YORKSHIRE, LS6 1LU
Contact Information
Telephone
0113 2783976Contractor/Dispenser Details
Contractor Name
KQ PHARMA LTD
Contractor Type
SINGLE CONTRACTOR
Dispenser Account Type
English Pharmacy
Health and Wellbeing Board (HWB)
LEEDS
Local Pharmaceutical Committee (LPC)
COMMUNITY PHARMACY WEST YORKSHIRE
Region
NORTH EAST AND YORKSHIRE
GPHC Registration Details
Pharmacy Registration Number
1039710
Trading Name
Star Pharmacy
Owner Name
KQ Pharma LtdPremises Type
Community
Status
Registered
Registration Dates
Initial Registration: 2006-02-04
Renewal Date: 2026-10-31
Expiry Date: 2026-12-31
GPHC Registered Address
136 Cardigan Road, LEEDS, West Yorkshire, LS61LU, England
Region: Yorkshire and The Humber
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
24/09/2020
Pharmacy context
This community pharmacy is on a busy road in a suburb of Leeds popular with students. The pharmacy’s main activities are dispensing NHS prescriptions and delivering medication to people’s homes. The pharmacy supplies some medicines in multi-compartment compliance packs to help several people take their medicines. The pharmacy provides the emergency hormonal contraception (EHC) service. The pharmacy was inspected during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Standards by principle
Principle 1 – Governance
Standards met
The pharmacy identifies and manages the risks associated with its services including the risks from COVID-19. The pharmacy has procedures to protect people's confidential information and it keeps the records it needs to by law. People using the pharmacy can easily raise concerns and provide feedback which the team members respond to well. Some team members have training, guidance and experience to respond to safeguarding concerns. This means they can help protect the welfare of children and vulnerable adults. The pharmacy team members respond appropriately when errors happen and they make changes to help prevent similar errors happening again. But they don’t always record all their errors which means they do not have all the information to help identify patterns and reduce errors.
Principle 2 – Staff
Standards met
The pharmacy has a team with the qualifications and skills to support its services. Team members work well together and support each other in their day-to-day work. They openly discuss errors so everyone can learn from them and improve their skills. The team members regularly discuss how they can improve services and agree new processes to help deliver them efficiently.
Principle 3 – Premises
Standards met
The pharmacy premises are clean, secure and suitable for the services provided. The pharmacy has good facilities to meet the needs of people requiring privacy when using the pharmacy services.
Principle 4 – Services
Standards met
The pharmacy provides services which support people's health needs and it manages its services well to help people receive appropriate care. The pharmacy gets its medicines from reputable sources and it stores them properly. The team carries out checks to make sure medicines are in good condition and suitable to supply.
Principle 5 – Equipment
Standards met
The pharmacy has the equipment it needs to provide safe services and to protect people’s private information.
Reports & documents (newest first)
Plans agreed with the pharmacy to address areas where standards were not met.
Inspection history summary
| Inspection date | Published | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| 24/09/2020 | 23/11/2020 | Standards met |
| 16/01/2020 | 04/06/2020 | Standards not all met |
Integrated Care Board
NHS WEST YORKSHIRE INTEGRATED CARE BOARD
Code: E54000054
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)
Leeds 054B
Code: E01011446
Overall Deprivation
Rank 16,229
of 33,755 LSOAs in England (2021)
51.9%
Percentile
Moderate Deprivation
This area is in the middle range of deprivation
Moderate levels of deprivation with mixed socioeconomic characteristics
Quintile (5 groups)
3
of 5
Moderately Deprived
Middle - 40-60%
Decile (10 groups)
5
of 10
Mid-range
Middle - 40-60%
Deprivation by Domain
Lower ranks = higher deprivation. Domains weighted differently in overall IMD.
Income
22.5%Rank 28,833
15th percentile
Proportion of people experiencing low income and benefits
Employment
22.5%Rank 32,478
4th percentile
Unemployment and worklessness among working-age people
Health
13.5%Rank 11,251
67th percentile
Health conditions, disability, and premature mortality
Education
13.5%Rank 12,299
64th percentile
Lack of school qualifications and skills
Crime
9.3%Rank 14,077
58th percentile
Recorded crime and disorder incidents
Housing Barriers
9.3%Rank 27,606
18th percentile
Housing affordability and access to services
Living Environment
9.3%Rank 199
99th 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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