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Analyzing dispensing patterns...

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OverviewDispensing ActivityPrescription SourcesEPS NominationsInspection ReportsOpening HoursPaymentsNearby LocationsCommissioningMetadata
  1. Home
  2. England Pharmacy
  3. Ash Vale Pharmacy & Travel Clinic

Pharmacy Analytics

Ash Vale Pharmacy & Travel ClinicGPhC

GPhC Owner: SHIVAARJ LTD

Contractor Trading Name: ASH VALE PHARMACY & TRAVEL CLINIC

Contractor Name: SHIVAARJ LTD

HWB: SURREY

Region: SOUTH EAST

Code: FXT31

Type: PHARMACY

View on mapCompetitor Analysis

Overview

Full Address

11 WHARF ROAD, ASH VALE, ALDERSHOT, HAMPSHIRE, GU12 5AZ

Contact Information

Telephone

01252 330377

Contractor/Dispenser Details

Contractor Name

SHIVAARJ LTD

Contractor Type

SINGLE CONTRACTOR

Dispenser Account Type

English Pharmacy

Health and Wellbeing Board (HWB)

SURREY

Local Pharmaceutical Committee (LPC)

SURREY LPC

Region

SOUTH EAST

GPHC Registration Details

Pharmacy Registration Number

1031626

Trading Name

Ash Vale Pharmacy & Travel Clinic

Owner Name

SHIVAARJ LTD

Premises Type

Community

Status

Registered

Registration Dates

Initial Registration: 1995-12-31

Renewal Date: 2026-10-31

Expiry Date: 2026-12-31

GPHC Registered Address

11 The Parade, Wharf Road, Ash Vale, ALDERSHOT, Hampshire, GU125AZ, England

Region: South East

Dispensing Activity

Prescription Sources

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EPS Nominations

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Inspection Reports

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

05/07/2022

Pharmacy context

This is a busy NHS community pharmacy set on a parade of shops in Ash Vale. The pharmacy is part of a large chain of pharmacies. It opens six days a week. It sells a range of health and beauty products, including some over-the-counter medicines. It dispenses people’s prescriptions. It delivers medicines to people who can’t attend its premises in person. And it supplies substance misuse treatments. The pharmacy dispenses medicines to people who live in a care home. It provides multi-compartment compliance packs (compliance packs) to help people take their medicines. And people can get a flu jab (vaccination) from the pharmacy.

Standards by principle

  • Principle 1 – Governance

    Standards met

    The pharmacy generally manages its risks appropriately. It has written instructions to help its team works safely. It mostly keeps the records it needs to by law. And it has appropriate insurance to protect people if things do go wrong. People who work in the pharmacy can explain what they do, what they are responsible for and when they might seek help. They keep people’s private information safe. They understand their role in protecting vulnerable people. And they review the mistakes they make. So, they can learn from them to try and stop them happening again.

  • Principle 2 – Staff

    Standards met

    The pharmacy has just enough people in its team to deliver safe and effective care. But sometimes team members are so busy they struggle to do all the things they are expected to do. Members of the pharmacy team do the right training for their roles. They work well together and make decisions about what is right for the people they care for. They’re comfortable about giving feedback on how to improve the pharmacy and its services. They know how to raise a concern if they have one. And their professional judgement and patient safety are not affected by targets.

  • Principle 3 – Premises

    Standards met

    The pharmacy provides a safe, secure and professional environment for people to receive healthcare in. And its premises are bright and tidy. The pharmacy has a room where people can have private conversations with members of the pharmacy team.

  • Principle 4 – Services

    Standards met

    The pharmacy provides services that people can access. Its working practices are generally safe and effective. And its team is helpful. Members of the pharmacy team dispose of people’s unwanted medicines properly. And they carry out checks to make sure the pharmacy’s medicines are safe and fit for purpose. The pharmacy delivers prescription medicines to people’s homes and keeps records to show that it has delivered the right medicine to the right person. It gets its medicines from reputable sources. And it stores them appropriately and securely.

  • Principle 5 – Equipment

    Standards met

    The pharmacy has the equipment and the facilities it needs to provide its services safely. It uses its equipment to make sure people’s data is kept secure. And its team makes sure the equipment it uses is clean.

Reports & documents (newest first)

Inspection reports
  • View inspection report05/07/2022
View full inspection history on GPhC

Inspection history summary

Inspection datePublishedOutcome
05/07/202221/07/2022Standards met

Opening Hours

Payments

Nearby Locations

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Commissioning

Integrated Care Board

NHS SURREY AND SUSSEX INTEGRATED CARE BOARD

Code: ES9B000000

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 rank = Higher deprivation
  • Higher rank = Lower deprivation
  • Area-level measure; 7 domains (Income & Employment 22.5% each)

Lower Layer Super Output Area (LSOA)

Guildford 004E

Code: E01030430

Overall Deprivation

Rank 30,350

of 33,755 LSOAs in England (2021)

10.1%

Percentile

10%

High Deprivation

This area is in the most deprived 20% nationally

Higher levels of deprivation may indicate greater need for healthcare services and support

Quintile (5 groups)

5

of 5

Least Deprived

Top 20% - Least deprived

Decile (10 groups)

9

of 10

Least Deprived

Top 20%

Deprivation by Domain

Lower ranks = higher deprivation. Domains weighted differently in overall IMD.

💰

Income

22.5%

Rank 29,572

12th percentile

Proportion of people experiencing low income and benefits

💼

Employment

22.5%

Rank 29,003

14th percentile

Unemployment and worklessness among working-age people

🏥

Health

13.5%

Rank 33,012

2nd percentile

Health conditions, disability, and premature mortality

📚

Education

13.5%

Rank 30,177

11th percentile

Lack of school qualifications and skills

🚨

Crime

9.3%

Rank 17,801

47th percentile

Recorded crime and disorder incidents

🏠

Housing Barriers

9.3%

Rank 19,381

43rd percentile

Housing affordability and access to services

🌍

Living Environment

9.3%

Rank 19,902

41st percentile

Housing quality and air quality

Metadata

Last Updated

7 July 2026

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