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Johnsonville Medical Centre
General Practice (GP) Service
Today
8:00 AM to 8:00 PM.
Description
We're a primary care general practice, which means we're here for your day to day health needs. Our doctors and nurses are in our community, supporting our patients through every different stage of life.
We're your first point of call for your health. We're here to listen, support, provide information, give you advice, and escalate if needed. Our doctors are trained medical professionals and they've seen it all before, so they're here to help.
Doctors
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Dr Mark Adcroft
General Practitioner - Vocationally Registered
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Dr Ross Anderson
General Practitioner - Vocationally Registered
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Dr Nicola Comer
General Practitioner
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Dr Bridget Gilmour
General Practitioner
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Dr Lisa Go
General Practitioner - Vocationally Registered
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Dr Nadia Hassan
General Practitioner
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Dr Julia Hudson
General Practitioner - Vocationally Registered
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Dr Simon Jordan
General Practitioner - Vocationally Registered
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Dr Jun Lee
General Practitioner
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Dr Sarah Li
General Practitioner - Vocationally Registered
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Dr Fabian Loontjens
General Practitioner
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Dr Anna McCavana
General Practitioner
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Dr Owen Miller
General Practitioner
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Dr Frances Moore
General Practitioner - Vocationally Registered
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Dr Patricia Neal
General Practitioner - Vocationally Registered
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Dr Sian Williams
General Practitioner - Vocationally Registered
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Dr Cliff Yang
General Practitioner
How do I access this service?
Enrolled patients, Casual (not enrolled) patients, Make an appointment, Contact us, Website / App
Enrolling new patients
Yes
This practice is enrolling new patients.
To check your eligibility or to start your enrolment, visit Enrol (johnsonvillemedical.co.nz)
Fees
Enrolled Patient Fees
Age Range | Without CSC | With CSC |
---|---|---|
Under 6 years | Free | Free |
6 to 13 years | Free | Free |
14 to 17 years | $54.00 | $13.00 |
18 to 24 years | $65.00 | $19.50 |
25 to 44 years | $71.00 | $19.50 |
45 to 64 years | $71.00 | $19.50 |
65+ years | $65.00 | $19.50 |
Hours
8:00 AM to 8:00 PM.
Mon – Thu | 8:00 AM – 8:00 PM |
---|---|
Fri | 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM |
Sat | 8:30 AM – 12:00 PM |
On Saturdays our phones are open from 8.30am and our doors are open from 9am
Public Holidays: Closed Wellington Anniversary (20 Jan), Waitangi Day (6 Feb), Good Friday (18 Apr), Easter Sunday (20 Apr), Easter Monday (21 Apr), ANZAC Day (25 Apr), King's Birthday (2 Jun), Matariki (20 Jun), Labour Day (27 Oct).
Christmas: Open 23 Dec — 24 Dec. Closed 25 Dec — 26 Dec. Open 27 Dec — 28 Dec. Closed 29 Dec. Open 30 Dec — 31 Dec. Closed 1 Jan — 2 Jan. Open 3 Jan — 4 Jan. Closed 5 Jan. Open 6 Jan — 10 Jan.
Preferred urgent care clinic out of hours: Wellington Accident and Urgent Medical Centre.
Services Provided
Immunisation is the safest and most effective way to provide protection for you and your tamariki’s health. For more information view the NZ immunisation schedule.
Immunisation is the safest and most effective way to provide protection for you and your tamariki’s health. For more information view the NZ immunisation schedule.
- Pregnancy vaccinations
- Childhood immunisation programme
- 45 year old vaccinations
- Adult flu vaccine
- Child flu vaccine
- Diphtheria / Tetanus / Pertussis (whooping cough) vaccine
- Measles / Mumps / Rubella (MMR) vaccine
- Meningococcal vaccine
Immunisation is the safest and most effective way to provide protection for you and your tamariki’s health. For more information view the NZ immunisation schedule.
All women and people with a cervix aged 25 – 69 who have ever had intimate skin-to-skin contact or been sexually active should have regular cervical screening. This includes women who have been immunised against HPV. Together, regular screening and HPV immunisation provide the best protection against cervical cancer. There are now more options for how you have cervical screening done: a simple vaginal swab test for HPV, either done yourself or with help from a healthcare professional a cervical sample taken by a healthcare professional (used to be known as a smear test). Talk with your healthcare provider to decide which option is best for you. If HPV is found, you may need to have a follow-up test or be referred directly for colposcopy. If you’ve not yet had HPV testing, you should be screened 3 years after your last test (or 1 year if immune deficient). Once you have had an HPV test, and providing HPV is not found, your next screening will be in 5 years (or 3 years if immune deficient). For more information: Cervical screening | Time to Screen - National Screening Unit
All women and people with a cervix aged 25 – 69 who have ever had intimate skin-to-skin contact or been sexually active should have regular cervical screening. This includes women who have been immunised against HPV. Together, regular screening and HPV immunisation provide the best protection against cervical cancer. There are now more options for how you have cervical screening done: a simple vaginal swab test for HPV, either done yourself or with help from a healthcare professional a cervical sample taken by a healthcare professional (used to be known as a smear test). Talk with your healthcare provider to decide which option is best for you. If HPV is found, you may need to have a follow-up test or be referred directly for colposcopy. If you’ve not yet had HPV testing, you should be screened 3 years after your last test (or 1 year if immune deficient). Once you have had an HPV test, and providing HPV is not found, your next screening will be in 5 years (or 3 years if immune deficient). For more information: Cervical screening | Time to Screen - National Screening Unit
All women and people with a cervix aged 25 – 69 who have ever had intimate skin-to-skin contact or been sexually active should have regular cervical screening. This includes women who have been immunised against HPV. Together, regular screening and HPV immunisation provide the best protection against cervical cancer.
There are now more options for how you have cervical screening done:
- a simple vaginal swab test for HPV, either done yourself or with help from a healthcare professional
- a cervical sample taken by a healthcare professional (used to be known as a smear test).
Talk with your healthcare provider to decide which option is best for you.
If HPV is found, you may need to have a follow-up test or be referred directly for colposcopy.
If you’ve not yet had HPV testing, you should be screened 3 years after your last test (or 1 year if immune deficient). Once you have had an HPV test, and providing HPV is not found, your next screening will be in 5 years (or 3 years if immune deficient).
For more information: Cervical screening | Time to Screen - National Screening Unit
LARC methods are very effective at preventing unplanned pregnancy and are “fit and forget” forms of contraception – you don’t need to remember them every day or every month. LARC methods: Intrauterine Contraceptive Devices (IUCD or IUD) are inserted through the cervix into a woman’s uterus. IUCDs may be either hormonal (Mirena® or Jaydess® ) or non-hormonal (copper IUCD). Jadelle® is a hormone-releasing implant that is inserted just under the skin of the upper arm. Depending on the type of device, it will need to be changed after between three and ten years. Read more about LARC methods here
LARC methods are very effective at preventing unplanned pregnancy and are “fit and forget” forms of contraception – you don’t need to remember them every day or every month. LARC methods: Intrauterine Contraceptive Devices (IUCD or IUD) are inserted through the cervix into a woman’s uterus. IUCDs may be either hormonal (Mirena® or Jaydess® ) or non-hormonal (copper IUCD). Jadelle® is a hormone-releasing implant that is inserted just under the skin of the upper arm. Depending on the type of device, it will need to be changed after between three and ten years. Read more about LARC methods here
- Free or subsidised contraception services (enquire for eligibility and details)
- IUD inserts
- Implant (Jadelle) inserts
- IUD removals
- Implant (Jadelle) removal
LARC methods are very effective at preventing unplanned pregnancy and are “fit and forget” forms of contraception – you don’t need to remember them every day or every month. LARC methods:
- Intrauterine Contraceptive Devices (IUCD or IUD) are inserted through the cervix into a woman’s uterus. IUCDs may be either hormonal (Mirena® or Jaydess® ) or non-hormonal (copper IUCD).
- Jadelle® is a hormone-releasing implant that is inserted just under the skin of the upper arm.
Depending on the type of device, it will need to be changed after between three and ten years.
Read more about LARC methods here
Disability Assistance
Wheelchair access, Wheelchair accessible toilet, Mobility parking space, NZ sign language interpreter, Assistance to move around, More space to move around
Website
Contact Details
24 Moorefield Road, Johnsonville, Wellington
Wellington
8:00 AM to 8:00 PM.
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Phone
(04) 920 8850
Healthlink EDI
wlgtnmed
Email
Website
24 Moorefield Road
Johnsonville
Wellington 6037
Street Address
24 Moorefield Road
Johnsonville
Wellington 6037
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This page was last updated at 3:01PM on November 4, 2024. This information is reviewed and edited by Johnsonville Medical Centre.