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Pharmacy Analytics
Full Address
28/30 NEWINGTON ROAD, EDINBURGH, EH9 1QS
Contact Information
Telephone
0131 6673008Contractor/Dispenser Details
Dispenser Name
BOOTS UK LTD
GPHC Registration Details
Pharmacy Registration Number
1042722
Trading Name
Boots
Owner Name
Boots UK LimitedPremises Type
Community
Status
Registered
Registration Dates
Initial Registration: 1995-08-01
Renewal Date: 2026-10-31
Expiry Date: 2026-12-31
GPHC Registered Address
28-30 Newington Road, EDINBURGH, Midlothian, EH91QS, Scotland
Region: Scotland
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
15/10/2019
Pharmacy context
This is a community pharmacy on a main road near the city centre close to other non-retail businesses. It dispenses NHS prescriptions including supplying medicines in multi-compartmental compliance packs. The pharmacy offers a repeat prescription collection service. And charged-for medicines’ delivery service. It also provides substance misuse services. The pharmacy team advises on minor ailments and medicines’ use and supplies a range of over-the-counter medicines. It offers smoking cessation, seasonal flu vaccination and malaria prophylaxis.
Standards by principle
Principle 1 – Governance
Standards met
The pharmacy team members follow written processes for all services to ensure that they are safe. They record mistakes to learn from them. And they review these and make changes to avoid the same mistake happening again. The pharmacy asks people for feedback. And pharmacy team members discuss this to make pharmacy services better. The pharmacy keeps all the records that it needs to by law and keeps people’s information safe. Pharmacy team members help to protect vulnerable people.
Principle 2 – Staff
Standards met
The pharmacy has enough qualified and experienced team members to safely provide services. The pharmacy compares the number and qualifications of team members to how busy the pharmacy is. And then it makes changes when required. This ensures a skilled and qualified team is always available to provide pharmacy services. Team members have access to training material to ensure they have the skills they need. The pharmacy gives them time to do this training. Pharmacy team members make decisions and use their professional judgement to help people. Team members can share information and raise concerns to keep the pharmacy safe. They make suggestions to improve services. And they discuss incidents to learn from them and avoid the same thing happening again.
Principle 3 – Premises
Standards met
The premises are safe and clean, and suitable for the pharmacy’s services. The pharmacy deals appropriately with maintenance issues. The pharmacy team members use a private room for some conversations with people. Other people cannot overhear these conversations.
Principle 4 – Services
Standards met
The pharmacy helps people to ensure that they can all use its services. The pharmacy team provides safe services. Team members all play their part in different services to ensure that the are safe and effective. They give people information to help them use their medicines. And they provide extra written information to people with some medicines. The pharmacy gets medicines from reliable sources and stores them properly. The pharmacy team knows what to do if medicines are not fit for purpose.
Principle 5 – Equipment
Standards met
The pharmacy has the equipment it needs for the delivery of its services. The pharmacy looks after this equipment to ensure it works.
Reports & documents (newest first)
Inspection history summary
| Inspection date | Published | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| 15/10/2019 | 24/11/2019 | Standards met |
Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation (SIMD)
Understanding SIMD
The Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation (SIMD) ranks 6,976 data zones from most deprived (1) to least deprived (6,976).
Key Points:
Overall Deprivation
Rank 6,043
of 6,976 data zones in Scotland
13.4%
Percentile
High Deprivation
Within the 14% most deprived in Scotland
Higher levels of deprivation may indicate greater need for healthcare services and support
Quintile (5 groups)
5
of 5
Least Deprived
Within 20% least deprived
Decile (10 groups)
9
of 10
Least Deprived
Within 20% least deprived
Vigintile (20 groups)
18
of 20
Least Deprived
Within 15% least deprived
Deprivation by Domain
Lower ranks = higher deprivation. Ranks are relative.
Income
Rank 5,731
18th percentile
Proportion of people with low income
Employment
Rank 6,122
12th percentile
Working-age people excluded from the labor market
Health
Rank 6,569
6th percentile
Risk of premature death and quality of life impairment
Education
Rank 5,212
25th percentile
Lack of attainment and skills in children and adults
Access to Services
Rank 4,858
30th percentile
Physical and financial accessibility of key services
Crime
Rank 4,421
37th percentile
Risk of personal and material victimization
Housing
Rank 62
99th percentile
Quality and availability of housing
Last Updated
6 May 2026
All data is updated monthly from official NHS sources, ensuring you always have access to the latest information.
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