Non-NHS & Private Fees

Some services provided are not covered under our contract with the NHS and therefore attract charges. Examples include the following:

  • Medicals for pre-employment, sports and driving requirements (HGV, PSV etc.)
  • Insurance claim forms
  • Passport signing
  • Prescriptions for taking medication abroad
  • Private sick notes
  • Vaccination certificates

The fees charged are based on the British Medical Association (BMA) suggested scales and our reception staff will be happy to advise you about them along with appointment availability. 

Stop Smoking Services

We can help you quit your habit!

If you are looking for help and advice on how to cut down or stop smoking, great support is offered through our local Stop Smoking Service in Halton. Our trained team of advisors use tried and tested ways to help you change your smoking habits. An example of this is using nicotine therapy.

There are a number of easy ways you can access the Halton Stop Smoking Service:

  • Give us a call on 0300 029 0029
  • Email us at HIT@halton.gov.uk
  • Visit your GP
  • Drop-in to your local chemist

Support can be ​offered via phone or face to face.

Flu Vaccinations

Does Age Affect The Risk Of Flu?

Yes. If you are aged 65 years or over or you are at higher risk.

Who Is At Risk?

  • If you are aged 65 years or over or if you are on regular inhaled steroids
  • If you have a chronic respiratory disease (including asthma)
  • If you have chronic heart disease
  • If you have chronic renal disease
  • If you are diabetic
  • If you have a weak immune system
  • If you live in a long-stay residential or nursing home
  • If you have a chronic liver disease
  • If you are a carer

Do I Need To Be Protected Against Pneumococcal Infection?

Everybody aged 65 and over should now be immunised to help protect them against pneumococcal infection which can cause diseases such as pneumonia, septicaemia (blood poisoning) and meningitis. Please phone the surgery during September to make an appointment if the above applies to you.

Other Services We Offer

  • Smoking Cessation – by appointment with the practice nurse
  • Chlamydia Screening – by appointment with the practice nurse
  • Dietetic Advice – by appointment with the practice nurse
  • Family Planning – by appointment with the doctor or practice nurse
  • Asthma Clinic – by appointment with the practice nurse
  • Hypertension (High Blood Pressure) Clinic – by appointment with the practice nurse
  • Minor Surgery  – by appointment (referral by doctor)
  • Child Health Clinic – by appointment via call/recall system
  • Over 40’s Health Checks – by appointment with the healthcare assistant

Travel Vaccinations

If you require any vaccinations relating to foreign travel you need to make an appointment with the practice nurse to discuss your travel arrangements. This will include which countries and areas within countries that you are visiting to determine what vaccinations are required.

Travel Vaccination Form

There is further information about countries and vaccinations available on the Fit For Travel website

It is important to make this initial appointment as early as possible – at least 6 weeks before you travel – as a second appointment will be required with the practice nurse to actually receive the vaccinations. These vaccines have to be ordered as they are not a stock vaccine. Your second appointment needs to be at least 2 weeks before you travel to allow the vaccines to work.

Some travel vaccines are ordered on a private prescription and these incur a charge over and above the normal prescription charge. This is because not all travel vaccinations are included in the services provided by the NHS. 

Thevaccines we offer are:

  • Hepatitis A
  • Typhoid
  • Hepatitis B (£75.00 for the full course, to be paidupfront)

 The nurse will check your records to make sure that you are up to date with Measles, Mumps and Rubellaand Diphtheria Tetanus and Polio. 

If youneed any other vaccines for your trip, (e.g. Yellow Fever, Meningitis ACWY,Rabies, T.B.) you will need to make an appointment with the School of tropical medicine, Pembroke Place, Liverpool, Telephone number 0151 705 3100. 

The nurse will advise you on Malaria prophylaxis. If you need a private prescription for your malaria tablets there will be a charge of £15 paid on receipt of theprescription. 

Having a travel clinic appointment is not an emergency. If you are a late traveler you can get your travelvaccines at the airport.  For further information please visit Last Minute Jabs

Cervical Screening: Smear Tests

Women aged between 24 and 64 should have a cervical screening every 3 to 5 years to help prevent cervical cancer. The screening is quick and painless and can be done here in the practice.

If you are aged over 24 and have never had a smear test, or if it has been more than 3 to 5 years since your last screening, you should arrange an appointment with our Practice Nurse. You should not have the test while you are having a period or in the 4 days before or after your period as this can affect the sample.

What is cervical screening?

Cervical screening is not a test for cancer. It is a method of preventing cancer by detecting and treating early abnormalities which, if left untreated, could lead to cancer in a woman’s cervix (the neck of the womb).

A sample of cells is taken from the cervix for analysis. A doctor or nurse inserts an instrument (a speculum) to open the woman’s vagina and uses a spatula to sweep around the cervix. Most women consider the procedure to be only mildly uncomfortable.

Early detection and treatment can prevent 75 per cent of cancers developing but like other screening tests, it is not perfect. It may not always detect early cell changes that could lead to cancer.

Who is eligible for cervical screening?

All women between the ages of 25 and 64 are eligible for a free cervical screening test every three to five yearsThe NHS call and recall system invites women who are registered with a GP. It also keeps track of any follow-up investigation, and, if all is well, recalls the woman for screening in three or five years time. It is therefore important that all women ensure their GP has their correct name and address details and inform them if these change.

Women who have not had a recent test may be offered one when they attend their GP or family planning clinic on another matter. Women should receive their first invitation for routine screening at 25.

Why are women under 25 not invited?

This is because changes in the young cervix are normal. If they were thought to be abnormal this could lead to unnecessary treatment which could have consequences for women’s childbearing. Any abnormal changes can be easily picked up and treated from the age of 25. Rarely, younger women experience symptoms such as unexpected bleeding or bleeding after intercourse. In this case they should see their GP for advice.

Why are women over 65 not invited?

Women aged 65 and over who have had three consecutive negative results are taken out of the call recall system. The natural history and progression of cervical cancer means it is highly unlikely that such women will go on to develop the disease. Women aged 65 and over who have never had a test are entitled to one.

What about women who are not sexually active?

The NHS Cervical Screening Programme invites all women between the ages of 25 and 64 for cervical screening. But if a woman has never been sexually active with a man, then the research evidence shows that her chance of developing cervical cancer is very low indeed. We do not say no risk, only very low risk. In these circumstances, a woman might choose to decline the invitation for cervical screening on this occasion. If a woman is not currently sexually active but has had male partners in the past, then we would recommend that she continues screening.

Child Immunisation

If a vaccine is given when a baby still has antibodies to the disease, the antibodies can stop the vaccine working. This is why routine childhood immunisations do not start until a baby is two months old, before the antibodies a baby gets from its mother have stopped working. This is also why it is important for parents to stick to the immunisation schedule, as a delay can leave a baby unprotected. A delay can increase the chance of adverse reactions to some vaccines, such as pertussis (whooping cough).

family, vaccination, vaccinated

Vaccination Schedule

At two months old: 

  • Diptheria, tetanus, pertussis (whooping cough), polio and Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) (DTaP/IPV/Hib) – one injection 
  • Pneumococcal infection – pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV) – one injection 

At three months old:

  • Diptheria, tetanus, pertussis (whooping cough), polio and Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) (DTaP/IPV/Hib) – one injection 
  • Meningitis C (meningococcal group C) (MenC) – one injection 

At four months old: 

  • Diptheria, tetanus, pertussis (whooping cough), polio and Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) (DTaP/IPV/Hib) – one injection 
  • Meningitis C (meningococcal group C) (MenC) – one injection 
  • Pneumococcal infection – pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV) – one injection 

At around 12 months old: 

  • Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) and meningitis C (Hib/MenC) – booster dose in one injection

At around 13 months old: 

  • Measles, mumps and rubella (German measles) (MMR) – one injection 
  • Pneumococcal infection – pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV) – one injection 

Three years four months to five years old (pre-school): 

  • Diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis (whooping cough) and polio (dTaP/IPV or DTaP/IPV) – one injection
  • Measles, mumps and rubella (German measles) (MMR) – one injection 
  • 13 to 18 years old: 
  • Diphtheria, tetanus and polio (Td/IPV) – one injection

Further reading

There are some excellent websites that will answer all your questions and queries about immunisation and vaccination. If you are worried about giving the MMR vaccine, you should access the MMR site.

NHS Choices – Immunisation Information
The most comprehensive, up-to-date and accurate source of information on vaccines, disease and immunisation in the UK. 

NHS Choices – MMR Information
This website has been put together to answer any questions you might have about MMR. You can look for information and resources in the MMR library, ask an expert panel a question, and read up on the latest news stories relating to MMR.

Diabetes/Cardiovascular Clinic 

We hold a clinics where patients who have diabetes and/or cardiovascular problems are given a full annual check together with a medication review. Patients are called and recalled routinely to attend this clinic.