A consultation is required to ensure that any requested prescription treatment is safe, appropriate, and clinically suitable before medication can be supplied.
Overview
This article explains:
Why the consultation must be completed
How the consultation supports clinical safety and prescribing
What happens after the consultation is submitted
Use this information to understand the role of the consultation.
Clinical safety and legal requirements
UK prescribing regulations require a clinical assessment to confirm:
The treatment is medically appropriate
There are no contraindications or safety concerns
The patient’s medical history and current medications are suitable for prescribing
The MedExpress consultation provides the information needed for this regulated clinical decision.
Information reviewed in the consultation
A UK-registered prescriber reviews the completed consultation, including:
Medical history and health conditions
Current medications or treatments
Height, weight, and relevant measurements
Previous use of similar prescription treatments
This review ensures prescribing follows clinical guidelines and patient-safety standards.
What happens after submitting a consultation
After the consultation is submitted:
A prescriber reviews the information for safety and suitability.
If the treatment is clinically appropriate, a private prescription may be issued.
If the treatment is not suitable, medication is not supplied.
This process protects patient safety and ensures responsible prescribing.
Key takeaway
A consultation is required for clinical safety and legal prescribing compliance.
A UK-registered prescriber must review eligibility before medication can be supplied.
Treatment is provided only when clinically appropriate and safe.
If you still need help after reviewing the information above, additional assistance is available.