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Pharmacy Analytics
GPhC Owner: Premoden Limited
Contractor Trading Name: NIMO PHARMACY
Contractor Name: PREMODEN LIMITED
HWB: BOURNEMOUTH, CHRISTCHURCH & POOLE
Region: SOUTH WEST
Code: FW563
Type: PHARMACY
Full Address
270 HERBERT AVENUE, PARKSTONE, POOLE, DORSET, BH12 4HY
Contact Information
Telephone
01202 717714Contractor/Dispenser Details
Contractor Name
PREMODEN LIMITED
Contractor Type
SINGLE CONTRACTOR
Dispenser Account Type
English Pharmacy
Health and Wellbeing Board (HWB)
BOURNEMOUTH, CHRISTCHURCH & POOLE
Local Pharmaceutical Committee (LPC)
DORSET LPC
Region
SOUTH WEST
GPHC Registration Details
Pharmacy Registration Number
1078853
Trading Name
Nimo Pharmacy
Owner Name
Premoden LimitedPremises Type
Community
Status
Registered
Registration Dates
Initial Registration: 2004-11-15
Renewal Date: 2026-10-31
Expiry Date: 2026-12-31
GPHC Registered Address
270 Herbert Avenue, Parkstone, POOLE, Dorset, BH124HY, England
Region: South West
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
07/11/2023
Pharmacy context
An independent pharmacy located on a busy residential road in Poole, Dorset. The pharmacy serves the local population and provides an NHS and private dispensing service. They also supply some medicines in multicompartment compliance aids and provide a supervised consumption service and a flu vaccination service. The pharmacy also has a local delivery service.
Standards by principle
Principle 1 – Governance
Standards met
The pharmacy team identifies and manages risks in the pharmacy appropriately. Team members record their mistakes and ensure they learn from them to reduce the likelihood of any recurrences. Team members are clear about their roles and responsibilities and work in a safe and professional way. The pharmacy keeps up‐to‐date records as required by law. The pharmacy keeps people’s private information safe and team members understand their role in protecting the safety of vulnerable people.
Principle 2 – Staff
Standards met
The pharmacy has enough staff to manage its workload safely. It makes sure that its team members are appropriately trained for the jobs they do. And they complete additional training to help them keep their knowledge up to date. They can use their professional judgement to decide whether it is safe to supply medicines.
Principle 3 – Premises
Standards met
The pharmacy's premises are modern, clean and suitable for the provision of its services. The premises are well maintained, and they are secure when closed. Pharmacy team members use private rooms for sensitive conversations with people to protect their privacy.
Principle 4 – Services
Standards met
The pharmacy provides its services in a safe and effective manner, and people with a range of needs can access them. The pharmacy sources, stores and manages medicines safely. This ensures that the medicines it supplies are fit for purpose. Team members identify people taking high‐risk medicines so that they can be given any extra information they may need to take their medicines safely. The pharmacy responds satisfactorily to drug alerts or product recalls so that people only receive medicines or devices which are safe for them to take.
Principle 5 – Equipment
Standards met
The pharmacy has the appropriate equipment and the facilities it needs to provide its services safely. It uses its equipment to make sure people’s data is kept secure.
Reports & documents (newest first)
Inspection history summary
| Inspection date | Published | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| 07/11/2023 | 24/11/2023 | Standards met |
Integrated Care Board
NHS DORSET INTEGRATED CARE BOARD
Code: E54000041
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)
Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole 023D
Code: E01015442
Overall Deprivation
Rank 5,166
of 33,755 LSOAs in England (2021)
84.7%
Percentile
Low Deprivation
This area is in the least deprived 20% nationally
Lower levels of deprivation typically indicate better access to resources and services
Quintile (5 groups)
1
of 5
Most Deprived
Bottom 20% - Most deprived
Decile (10 groups)
2
of 10
Most Deprived
Bottom 20%
Deprivation by Domain
Lower ranks = higher deprivation. Domains weighted differently in overall IMD.
Income
22.5%Rank 4,393
87th percentile
Proportion of people experiencing low income and benefits
Employment
22.5%Rank 4,104
88th percentile
Unemployment and worklessness among working-age people
Health
13.5%Rank 4,164
88th percentile
Health conditions, disability, and premature mortality
Education
13.5%Rank 3,987
88th percentile
Lack of school qualifications and skills
Crime
9.3%Rank 8,014
76th percentile
Recorded crime and disorder incidents
Housing Barriers
9.3%Rank 16,679
51st percentile
Housing affordability and access to services
Living Environment
9.3%Rank 28,524
15th percentile
Housing quality and air quality
Last Updated
7 July 2026
All data is updated monthly from official NHS sources, ensuring you always have access to the latest information.
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