Medicine Shop UK

stomach • bowel • acid & reflux care

Gastro & Digestive Prescriptions

RX Required • Prescriber-Led Treatment

Prescription gastro & digestive medicines are used for conditions such as acid reflux, heartburn, stomach ulcers, inflammatory bowel disease and other digestive disorders. These treatments must be initiated and monitored by a clinician, and every supply through Medishop UK is reviewed by a pharmacist.

✔ Valid UK prescription required for all gastro & digestive medicines ✔ Doses, timing and treatment length set by your prescriber ✔ Some therapies require blood tests or ongoing review ✔ Every order is clinically checked before dispensing

Acid, Reflux & Ulcer Care

Prescription treatments can support acid control, reflux management and ulcer healing when your clinician judges them appropriate, often alongside dietary and lifestyle advice.

Gut Motility & Bowel Support

Certain prescriptions may be used to help manage bowel movement, cramps or gut motility issues, in line with specialist assessment and monitoring.

Long-Term Digestive Conditions

Some chronic digestive conditions require ongoing treatment plans, blood tests and reviews to keep symptoms under control and protect long-term health.

How to request gastro & digestive medicines (RX)

  1. Discuss your digestive symptoms and history with your GP or specialist clinician.
  2. If they issue a prescription, ask for it to be shared with Medishop UK or request a copy.
  3. Upload your prescription securely via our RX upload page, or follow support team instructions.
  4. Our pharmacist will clinically review the prescription, confirm availability & pricing, and arrange safe delivery.

All gastro & digestive medicines are dispensed in line with your prescriber’s instructions and pharmacist approval.

Seek urgent medical help if you experience sudden severe abdominal pain, vomiting blood, black or bloody stools, difficulty swallowing, chest pain, unexplained weight loss, or any symptom your clinician has highlighted as an emergency. In an emergency, call 999 or attend your nearest A&E immediately.