AAH healthwatch Blood Pressure Service

It is estimated that more than one in three adults living in the UK have high blood pressure, of these only 20% are diagnosed and treated.

With many unaware that they may have high blood pressure it is important patients have the opportunity to understand the risk factors and how to manage them.

Training and support for your pharmacy

All pharmacists subscribing to the service will receive face-to-face training from a dedicated healthwatch business manager. This does not need to be limited to pharmacists either. Our experience shows that engaging the pharmacy team makes the service more efficient and rewarding.

Subscribe to the service and receive:

  • A comprehensive pharmacy training manual
  • Complete service documentation
  • Support from a dedicated healthwatch Business Manager
  • Patient leaflets that help educate and inform
  • Clinical guidelines for your consultation room
  • Point of Sale materials to help you market the service
  • FREE Blood Pressure meter for your consultation room.

Service Fees

The Blood Pressure service is available to AAH healthwatch members for a one-off fee of £115 - which includes your training and support plus a free Blood Pressure Monitor.

Price excludes VAT and correct at time of publication. Monitor model subject to change and availability

If you're new to healthwatch our monthly membership fee of just £33.25 provides a host of benefits, including a dedicated business manager, in-store training and practical advice on how to implement our services.

Request for information

AAH healthwatch Blood Pressure Service

AAH may provide your business name and address, details (including dates of supply) of the products and services you take from the Group to a data service provider who will anonymise it on our behalf and provide the anonymised version to manufacturers to enable them to understand preferences, ensure satisfactory stock levels and improve products and services.

Useful Info

Institute of Healthcare Management

Primary Care Contracting

Patient

The Pharmaceutical Journal

Department of Health