Arch Medical Practice: appointments, hours, registration and patient help
Trying to contact the Hulme surgery, book a GP appointment, register as a new patient, order repeat medication, or work out whether to use NHS 111? This guide gives you the safest route first, then explains test results, fit notes, access, map directions, out-of-hours help and official source checks.
Use this number for: appointment questions, urgent same-day help, registration support, prescription issues, disabled access questions, test result questions, fit note queries, or if online forms are difficult.
Hulme Medical Centre
175 Royce Road
Hulme, Manchester
M15 5TJ
NHS.uk lists the official profile as The Arch Medical Practice. Use the full address when planning travel.
Get directionsThe Arch Medical Practice serves patients in Hulme and nearby Manchester areas. Most visitors to a GP directory page are not looking for medical jargon. They want to know who to contact, what to say, when the surgery is open, how appointments work, and what to do if the practice is closed.
This page is written as a plain-English patient guide. It is useful if you are new to Hulme, supporting an older relative, trying to use the NHS App, ordering repeat medicine, requesting a fit note, checking test results, or deciding whether to contact the GP, a pharmacy, NHS 111 or 999.
Is The Arch Medical Practice open today?
The official practice contact page lists The Arch Medical Practice as open Monday to Friday from 8:00am to 6:30pm. Saturday and Sunday are listed as closed. Always check the official practice website or NHS.uk before travelling, especially around bank holidays, staff training days or local service changes.
| Day | Listed access | Patient note |
|---|---|---|
| Monday | 8:00am to 6:30pm | Use NHS App, phone, online form, or reception route depending on need. |
| Tuesday | 8:00am to 6:30pm | Call early if you need help today. Use online forms for routine requests. |
| Wednesday | 8:00am to 6:30pm | Good day for routine admin, prescription, fit note and test-result questions. |
| Thursday | 8:00am to 6:30pm | Send routine requests early so the practice has time to review them. |
| Friday | 8:00am to 6:30pm | Do not leave medicine or urgent admin questions until late afternoon. |
| Saturday | Closed | Use NHS 111 if you need urgent help that cannot wait. |
| Sunday | Closed | Use 999 for emergencies, NHS 111 for urgent advice, or pharmacy for minor illness. |
Which service should you use?
Use this guide before calling. It helps you choose the right route and avoids waiting for the wrong service.
Call 999 now
Use 999 for chest pain, stroke signs, severe breathing trouble, heavy bleeding, collapse, seizure, serious allergic reaction, or someone not responding.
Use NHS 111
Use NHS 111 when you need urgent help and the GP is closed, or you are not sure which NHS service is right. Call 111 or use 111 online.
Contact The Arch
Use the GP for ongoing symptoms, repeat medicine issues, fit notes, test result questions, letters to specialists, long-term conditions and routine health problems.
Ask a pharmacy
Use a pharmacy for medicine advice, minor illness, coughs, colds, sore throat, some Pharmacy First conditions and prescription collection questions.
How to book an Arch Medical Practice appointment
The official appointment guidance explains that the administrative team may ask what you need help with. This is to choose the right doctor, nurse, health professional or service. Do not take offence if they ask questions.
Use the NHS App
The practice notice says GP appointments and sexual health screening appointments are given out via the NHS App. On-the-day face-to-face appointments are released from 8:00am, and routine appointments are released from 12:00pm for future dates.
Good for: patients who can use a smartphone or NHS account and want to choose from available appointment times.
Call reception
Call 0161 226 0606. The official appointment page says urgent appointments can also be requested by phone or by visiting the surgery.
Good for: urgent problems, elderly or vulnerable patients, access needs, or if the NHS App is difficult for you.
Use the online form
The practice site links to online contact options for non-urgent medical or admin requests. Use this when your request can wait and you can explain the problem in writing.
Tip: include when the problem started, what you have tried, and what worries you most.
Visit reception
You can visit the surgery and speak with a receptionist during opening hours. This may help if online forms or phone calls are difficult.
Important: the practice is not a walk-in emergency service. Use 999 or NHS 111 when needed.
Hello, my name is [your name]. My date of birth is [your date of birth]. I am a patient at The Arch Medical Practice. I need help because [say the problem in one sentence]. Is there anything available today, this week, or as soon as possible?
You do not need to explain everything at once. Reception may ask questions to help direct you to a doctor, nurse, pharmacist, online reply or urgent service.
Helpful NHS App video for GP services
This video is useful if you want to understand the NHS App for appointments, prescriptions, records and some GP services. Always follow The Arch Medical Practice’s own instructions for local appointment routes.
How to register with The Arch Medical Practice
NHS.uk currently shows The Arch Medical Practice as accepting new patients. You should still check whether your home address is in the area the practice covers before you start registration.
Use NHS Find a GP or contact the practice. Ask: “I live at this postcode. Can I register with The Arch Medical Practice?”
Start from the NHS profile or the official practice website. If online registration is available, complete it carefully. If not, ask reception what to do.
You may need your name, date of birth, address, phone number, email, previous GP, NHS number if known, and basic health information.
ID and proof of address can help. NHS guidance says you should not be refused GP registration only because you do not have ID, proof of address, immigration status, or an NHS number.
If you take regular medicine, tell the practice and your pharmacy when you register. This helps reduce the risk of running out while records transfer.
What to bring to your GP appointment
Bringing the right things can save another call or second visit. This is helpful for new patients, carers, older patients and people taking several medicines.
Arch Medical Practice repeat prescriptions
Do not wait until your last tablet. Order repeat medicine early, especially before weekends, bank holidays, travel, or if the medicine needs review. The practice prescription guidance says patients on repeat medicines may be asked to have a yearly medication review with the pharmacy team.
NHS App
Use the NHS App if repeat prescription ordering is available for your account. Choose your medicine, select your nominated pharmacy and submit the request.
Practice online route
Use the official practice website or online system for repeat prescription guidance and medication contact routes.
Pharmacy help
Your local pharmacy can often help with medicine advice, side effects, repeat prescription process questions and prescription collection.
Phone if stuck
If you cannot use online tools, call the practice and ask which prescription route is right for you. Say clearly if you are close to running out.
Test results, blood tests and hospital letters
The official test-results page says the quickest and easiest way to view results is through the NHS App. If a doctor has reviewed your results, they may also be available through your NHS account or by contacting the practice.
Ask when results are expected
Before leaving your appointment, ask when the result should be back and how you will hear. Some results take longer than others.
Check the NHS App if available
The NHS App may show test results and GP record information where access is enabled. You may need to prove who you are for full NHS App access.
Call if you are worried
If symptoms are worse, or you have not heard when you expected to, call the practice and ask what the next step is.
Do not ignore symptoms
Do not assume “no news” always means everything is fine. If you feel worse, use the right urgent service.
Sick notes, fit notes and work letters
A fit note is the note many employers ask for when you are off work because of illness. The practice fit-note page says the current sick note turnaround is five working days, and sick notes can be backdated if required.
Ask whether they need a self-certification form or a GP fit note.
If you need a fit note, use the online form if available or call reception and explain the date your illness started.
Say when you became unwell, whether you are still off work and whether you have already spoken to a doctor or nurse.
If you were treated in hospital, ask the hospital team whether they should provide a note or discharge letter.
Services patients often need
Exact services can change by staffing, appointment type, clinical need and local NHS pathways. CQC lists this GP practice for maternity and midwifery services, family planning, treatment of disease, disorder or injury, diagnostic and screening procedures, and services for everyone.
Parking, disabled access, language help and visiting the surgery
Use the official NHS profile and practice website for the latest live facilities information before travelling. This is especially important if you need step-free access, wheelchair access, a hearing loop, interpreter support, or extra help at reception.
Disabled access
Check the NHS profile before travelling if you need step-free access, wheelchair support, accessible toilets, hearing support, or other reasonable adjustments.
Parking and arrival
Plan your route before leaving. If you are coming by taxi or car, use the full address: Hulme Medical Centre, 175 Royce Road, Hulme, Manchester, M15 5TJ.
Children and carers
Bring the red book for a child where relevant. If you are a carer, tell reception so the practice knows who can speak for the patient.
Language and hearing support
Ask for interpreter support when booking if English is difficult. Ask about text relay, BSL support, or other reasonable adjustments if needed.
Hello, I need help in [language]. Can you arrange an interpreter for my appointment or phone call?
Arch Medical Practice map and directions
Address: Hulme Medical Centre, 175 Royce Road, Hulme, Manchester, M15 5TJ. Use the map for planning only. Confirm your appointment time before leaving.
By car or taxi
Use postcode M15 5TJ. Give the full address to the driver: Hulme Medical Centre, 175 Royce Road, Hulme.
By tram or train
Plan your route using TfGM or Google Maps. Manchester routes can change, so check live travel information before leaving.
By bus
Use Bee Network, Google Maps or Traveline to check live bus routes to Hulme, Royce Road and nearby stops.
Before leaving home
Take your phone, appointment details, medicine list, glasses or hearing aids and any paperwork the surgery asked for.
What to do when The Arch Medical Practice is closed
| Problem | Use this service | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Life-threatening emergency | Call 999 | Chest pain, stroke signs, severe breathing trouble, heavy bleeding, collapse, not responding. |
| Urgent but not life-threatening | NHS 111 online or call 111 | You need advice today and cannot wait for the GP to reopen. |
| Mental health crisis | Samaritans 116 123 or NHS 111 | You feel unsafe, overwhelmed, or need urgent mental health support. |
| Minor illness | Local pharmacy | Coughs, colds, sore throat, minor rash, medicine advice and Pharmacy First queries. |
| Serious injury | A&E or urgent treatment centre | Broken bones, serious cuts, head injury, severe pain, or urgent injuries. |
| Urgent prescription when closed | NHS 111 or pharmacy | If you are running out of important medicine, ask NHS 111 or a pharmacy what urgent route is available. |
Patient checklist before you call or visit
Reception usually needs it to find your record.
Make sure the practice can call you back.
Start with the main issue. You can explain more later.
Use words like “getting worse”, “today”, “child”, “elderly”, or “medicine running out”.
This helps the GP or nurse avoid mistakes.
Use Hulme Medical Centre, 175 Royce Road, Manchester, M15 5TJ.
CQC rating and official quality note
CQC currently lists The Arch Medical Practice as Overall: Good. CQC also shows Good ratings for safe, effective, caring, responsive and well-led areas, with the report published on 8 November 2016 and latest review information shown for 6 July 2023.
Always use the official CQC record for the latest inspection status. Do not rely on copied ratings from old directories because inspection information can change.
Official source check and reference notes
Publish-ready as of 6 June 2026: this guide was checked against NHS.uk, the official The Arch Medical Practice website pages, and the CQC record. This page is an independent patient directory guide, not the official NHS or practice website.
Main reference sources used: NHS.uk was used for the official profile name, address and new-patient status. The official practice appointment page was used for appointment routes, NHS App guidance, urgent/routine appointment timing and home visit wording. The prescription, test-result and fit-note pages were used for medication, results and sick note guidance. CQC was used for the current rating, address, phone number and registered service categories.
Official links: NHS.uk The Arch Medical Practice profile · Official practice website · Official appointments page · Official prescriptions page · Official test results page · Official fit notes page · CQC The Arch Medical Practice record · NHS 111 online · NHS App
Why this matters: GP opening times, online forms, registration status, appointment access, facilities and CQC records can change. This guide links users back to official sources so they can verify live details before calling, travelling or relying on the information.