Mackenzie Medical Centre Walk-In: Same-Day NHS GP 2026

Emergency first: This is an independent patient guide, not NHS Scotland, NHS Lothian or Mackenzie Medical Centre. If someone has chest pain, stroke signs, severe breathing difficulty, heavy bleeding, collapse, severe allergic reaction, seizure, severe injury, or is not responding, call 999 now. If it is urgent but not life-threatening and the practice is closed, call NHS 24 on 111.
Edinburgh NHS GP patient handbook 2026

Mackenzie Medical Centre Walk-In: same-day NHS GP help, appointments, hours and prescriptions

Mackenzie Medical Centre is an NHS GP practice at 20 West Richmond Street, Edinburgh EH8 9DX. This guide explains same-day urgent GP help, whether walk-in is suitable, telephone triage, face-to-face appointments, telephone appointments, opening hours, prescriptions, test results, fit notes, home visits, new patient registration, students, interpreter support, access, complaints and NHS 24 out-of-hours help.

Start here before you travel
1
Danger signs?Call 999. Do not wait for reception or GP callback.
2
Urgent GP problem?Call 0131 651 1000 and explain it is medically urgent.
3
Routine issue?Book by phone or in person during practice hours.
4
Need medicine?Use online services, prescription phone line or written slip.
Appointments and main practice phone

Use this number for: same-day urgent GP advice, routine appointments, telephone appointments, home-visit requests, interpreter requests, longer appointment needs, appointment cancellation, registration questions, access needs or if you are unsure whether to attend in person.

Address

Mackenzie Medical Centre
20 West Richmond Street
Edinburgh
EH8 9DX

The practice is near West Richmond Street and Nicolson Street bus routes. Parking meters are adjacent to the medical centre, and bike racks are near the practice entrance.

Open directions
Practice
Mackenzie Medical Centre
Appointments
0131 651 1000
Core hours
08:00 to 18:00
Regulation note
Scotland, not CQC England
Fast answer: Mackenzie Medical Centre is at 20 West Richmond Street, Edinburgh, EH8 9DX. Appointments are handled through 0131 651 1000. The practice operates telephone triage, with face-to-face and telephone appointments available. It is not a casual walk-in clinic for routine GP care: if you need a doctor or nurse, you should make an appointment by phone or in person. If your problem is medically urgent, tell reception clearly so the duty doctor route can be used.

Unique patient decision hub: choose the right route in 60 seconds

Use this before you call, walk to reception or wait for a callback. It helps you avoid the wrong service and explains the difference between urgent GP, routine GP, pharmacy, NHS 24 and 999.

I need urgent help today

Call 0131 651 1000 during practice hours and clearly say the problem is medically urgent. Reception will take brief details so the duty doctor can prioritise.

I want to walk in

You can attend reception to ask for help, but you should not assume a walk-in GP consultation is available. If you need a doctor or nurse, the practice says you must make an appointment.

I need routine care

Book by phone or in person between 08:00 and 18:00 Monday to Friday. Ask for a longer appointment if you have a complex issue.

I need results

Call 0131 651 4145 between 09:00 and 11:00 for practice-ordered results that have been cleared by a doctor.

I need repeat medication

Use online ordering, the prescription phone line 0131 650 2674 between 14:00 and 15:00, or the prescription box. Allow 48 hours.

The practice is closed

Call NHS 24 on 111 for urgent care that cannot wait, or call 999 for life-threatening emergencies.

Is Mackenzie Medical Centre a walk-in clinic?

Practical answer: Mackenzie Medical Centre is an NHS GP practice, not a general walk-in clinic where every patient can arrive and automatically see a doctor. The official appointments page says if you wish to see a doctor or nurse you must make an appointment, and this can be done in person or by telephone between 08:00 and 18:00 Monday to Friday.

Yes

You can speak to reception

Attending in person may help if you cannot use the phone or need reception support, but it does not guarantee a same-day face-to-face consultation.

No

Not a casual walk-in GP clinic

For doctor or nurse care, the practice expects an appointment. Urgent problems are prioritised by medical need.

Urg

Urgent problem?

Tell reception clearly if it is medically urgent. The practice says urgent problems will be seen the same day by whichever doctor is available.

111

Closed or out of hours?

Use NHS 24 on 111 if you are too unwell to wait until the GP practice opens, or 999 for emergencies.

Best wording at reception: “I understand this may not be a walk-in clinic. I’m worried because [symptom/reason]. Can you tell me whether this needs urgent GP triage today, a routine appointment, pharmacy advice or NHS 24?”

Mackenzie Medical Centre opening hours 2026

The official opening-hours page lists the practice as open Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday from 08:00 to 18:00. On Thursday, it is listed as 08:00 to 13:00 and 14:00 to 18:00, with closure between 13:00 and 14:00. Doctors are listed as available for consultation from 09:00 to 17:15, and nurse clinics from 08:00 to 16:00.

Day / serviceOfficial listed accessPractical patient note
Monday08:00 to 18:00Call early if your problem is medically urgent today.
Tuesday08:00 to 18:00Extended access routine appointments may be available on Tuesday mornings.
Wednesday08:00 to 18:00Good day for routine appointments, results and prescription planning.
Thursday08:00 to 13:00 / 14:00 to 18:00The practice is closed between 13:00 and 14:00 every Thursday.
Friday08:00 to 18:00Do not leave prescription or urgent admin questions until late Friday.
Doctor consultations09:00 to 17:15Exact appointment type depends on triage and availability.
Nurse clinics08:00 to 16:00Book nurse work in advance where possible.
Out of hours18:00 to 08:00, weekends and public holidaysUse NHS 24 on 111 for urgent non-emergency help.

How to book an appointment at Mackenzie Medical Centre

The official appointment route is straightforward: call 0131 651 1000 or make an appointment in person. The call handler will ask for brief details of your reason so the practice can arrange the most appropriate professional. If you do not want to say exactly what the problem is, you can say it is personal, but giving some brief detail helps safe triage.

1
Check if it is an emergency.
Use 999 for life-threatening symptoms. Use NHS 24 on 111 if the practice is closed and the issue is urgent but not life-threatening.
2
Call or attend reception to request the appointment.
Appointments can be made by telephone or in person between 08:00 and 18:00 Monday to Friday.
3
Give a brief reason.
Say the main symptom, how long it has been going on, and whether it is getting worse. This helps the practice choose GP, nurse, telephone, face-to-face or urgent route.
4
Ask for a specific doctor if continuity matters.
The practice says if you wish to see a particular doctor, tell the receptionist. You may need to wait for that doctor’s availability.
5
Ask for longer time if needed.
Doctor appointments are normally 10 minutes. If your issue needs longer, ask when booking.
6
Book one appointment per person.
If more than one family member needs to be seen, make a separate appointment for each person.
Simple appointment script
Hello, my name is [name]. My date of birth is [date of birth]. I am a patient at Mackenzie Medical Centre. I need help because [one clear sentence]. I think it is [urgent today / routine / suitable for telephone / needs face-to-face]. Can you advise the safest appointment route?

Same-day NHS GP help: when Mackenzie Medical Centre may see you today

The practice’s patient rights page says urgent problems will be seen the same day by whichever doctor is available. That does not mean every request is a same-day appointment. It means medically urgent problems are prioritised. Reception may take details and the duty doctor may call back first.

SituationLikely routeWhat to say
Acute medical problemUrgent advice call / duty doctor“This started today / is getting worse / I am worried it cannot wait.”
Long-term stable issueRoutine appointment“This has been ongoing and I would prefer continuity if possible.”
Medication reviewTelephone appointment may be suitable“I need a medication review and can discuss it by phone if appropriate.”
Blood/test result discussionTelephone appointment or results line“The test was done at the practice and I’m calling for a cleared result.”
Minor illnessPharmacy may be faster“Would pharmacy be the best first step for this?”
Same-day does not mean walk-in: same-day urgent care is based on clinical need, usually after reception triage and/or duty doctor review.

Before you call or visit reception: practical checklist

Good preparation helps the call handler and clinician understand your need quickly. This is especially useful for older patients, carers, students, people taking several medicines, and anyone who feels nervous on the phone.

Full name and date of birth
Best callback number
Main symptom or request
When it started
Whether it is getting worse
Medicine list and allergies
Hospital letters if relevant
Test location if asking results
Preferred GP, if continuity matters
Interpreter need
Mobility or access need
Whether telephone is suitable
Good triage wording example
I have had [symptom] for [time]. It is [getting worse / not improving / affecting sleep / affecting work]. I have tried [medicine or self-care]. I take [regular medicines]. I am worried because [reason]. I can take a telephone call during [time] on [phone number].

Telephone triage and telephone appointments

The practice homepage says it operates a telephone triage system. If you have arranged a telephone appointment, you will be given a one-hour time slot and should be available to answer during that time. The appointments page says telephone appointments can be suitable for blood/test results, medication reviews and mental health reviews.

1h

One-hour time slot

Keep your phone nearby, charged and off silent. Missing the call can delay care.

Rx

Medication review

Have medicine packets, pharmacy details and any side effects written down before the call.

MH

Mental health review

Choose a private place if possible. Write down what has changed and whether you feel safe.

Lab

Results discussion

Know where the test was done. The practice cannot pass on results from tests taken outside the practice.

Mackenzie Medical Centre repeat prescriptions

Repeat prescriptions are for medication the doctor has placed on repeat and which appears on your re-ordering slip. The official prescriptions page says this service cannot be used to order other medication. NHS guidance limits repeat medication issue to a maximum of two months’ supply each time. Please allow 48 hours before collection.

Web

Order online

Register for online services first, then use the Patient Services login to request repeat prescriptions.

Tel

Prescription phone line

Call 0131 650 2674 Monday to Friday from 14:00 to 15:00 for repeat prescription ordering.

Slip

Written request

Use your re-ordering slip or written request and place it in the prescription box in the practice lobby.

Post

Post back

The practice can post prescriptions if you include a stamped addressed envelope with the request.

Prescription issueWhat it usually meansPractical next step
Almost out of medicineYou may not have allowed the 48-hour processing time.Ask a pharmacist or NHS 24 about urgent supply if needed.
Medicine not on repeat slipIt may need GP review before it can be issued.Book the correct appointment or medication review route.
Need a local chemist collectionSome chemists collect repeat prescriptions.Tell reception each time if you want it sent to a listed chemist.
Prescription after hospital changeThe GP may need hospital information before issuing safely.Contact early and do not wait until the hospital supply runs out.
Chemist collection note: the official page lists several local chemists offering collection, including Boots St Patrick Street, Boots Cameron Toll, Boots Newington Road, Bristo Square Pharmacy, Dears Pharmacy Easter Road, Grange Pharmacy, Marchmont Pharmacy, Newington Pharmacy, Royal Mile Pharmacy, Southside Pharmacy and others. Confirm with the practice and pharmacy before relying on a collection arrangement.

Test results, blood tests and hospital results

The official results page says you can call for results of tests carried out at the practice on 0131 651 4145 between 09:00 and 11:00. Reception staff can pass on results that have been cleared by the doctor. The practice cannot pass on results of tests taken outside the practice; you should contact the clinic where those tests were taken.

1
Check where the test was done.
Practice tests and hospital/clinic tests follow different result routes.
2
Call at the correct time.
Use 0131 651 4145 between 09:00 and 11:00 for practice test results.
3
Wait for doctor clearance.
Reception can pass on results only after the doctor has cleared them.
4
Do not ignore worsening symptoms.
If symptoms get worse while waiting, call the practice, NHS 24 or 999 depending on severity.

Sick notes, fit notes and medical certificates

The official sick/fit note page says if you are off work sick for seven days or less, your employer should not ask for a doctor’s certificate. If you are off work sick for more than seven days, your employer will normally ask for a medical certificate from your GP. The seven days include days you do not normally work, such as weekends and bank holidays.

7

7 days or less

Use self-certification. Ask your employer whether they use their own form or the HMRC SC2 form.

8+

More than 7 days

You may need a GP medical certificate if you are still off sick after seven continuous days.

Hosp

Hospital care

If you are under hospital care, your certificate may be issued by the hospital rather than the practice.

No

Not an emergency appointment

The official guidance says emergency appointments are not for certificate requests; book routine care where appropriate.

Home visits: when to request one

Home visits should be requested only if the patient is too ill or infirm to come to the surgery. The official appointments page asks patients to telephone before 10:30 if possible so the doctors on call can plan visits. Requests after 10:30 are referred to a doctor and non-urgent visits may be arranged for another day.

SituationLikely routeImportant note
Too ill or infirm to attendRequest before 10:30 where possibleReception will ask details so urgent visits can be prioritised.
Housebound patientHome visit may be consideredExplain clearly why travelling is not safe.
Transport difficulty onlyUsually attend surgeryA GP can see several patients in the surgery in the time one home visit takes.
Emergency symptomsCall 999Do not wait for a GP home visit.

Register with Mackenzie Medical Centre as a new patient

The official new-patients page says the practice is open for new patient registrations, forms are available at reception, and you must ensure your address is within the catchment area before registering. Registration can take up to one week to process, and the practice asks patients not to contact them before this time to check progress. The page also states the practice cannot accept medical students.

1
Check your address first.
Use the practice boundary map or ask reception if your postcode is unclear.
2
Collect or complete registration forms.
The official page says forms are available at reception.
3
Allow processing time.
The practice says registration can take up to one week and confirmation will be sent by text or email.
4
Plan repeat medicines before changing GP.
Do not wait until you have almost run out of medicine when moving practice.
5
Medical student warning.
The official page says the practice cannot accept medical students for registration.

Training practice, medical students and patient choice

Mackenzie Medical Centre is a GP training practice and is associated with the University of Edinburgh Medical School. Qualified doctors specialising in general practice may work at the practice as part of training. Fourth-year medical students are frequently attached to the practice, and you should be informed if a student is sitting in with the doctor or nurse.

GP

GP registrars

These are qualified doctors who are specialising in general practice after hospital training.

Uni

Medical students

Students may observe or take part in teaching under supervision, but you can ask to see the clinician alone.

No

You can decline

If you prefer not to have a student present, say so. This should not affect your care.

Help

Volunteer teaching

The practice sometimes looks for patients with certain conditions to help student teaching.

Access, interpreter help, disabled access, breastfeeding and C:Card

The official homepage lists disabled access via ramp and automatic doors, plus an induction loop at reception for people with impaired hearing. It also says the practice leaflet is available in audio format. If you require an interpreter for your appointment, notify reception and they will arrange it.

A

Disabled access

Ramp access, automatic doors and induction loop are listed. Ask ahead if you need extra help.

I

Interpreter

Tell reception before your appointment if you need an interpreter arranged.

C

Chaperone

If you prefer a chaperone during an appointment, tell reception or the doctor/nurse.

BF

Breastfeeding friendly

The practice says it supports breastfeeding and is part of the Breastfeeding Friendly Scotland Scheme.

C:Card note: the practice says it is a C:Card point for people aged 16 and over who want free condoms, which can be collected from reception.

Reviews, CQC search confusion and how to check quality

People often search “Mackenzie Medical Centre CQC rating,” but Mackenzie Medical Centre is in Scotland. CQC regulates health and social care services in England, so a CQC rating is not the correct quality check for this practice. Use official NHS Scotland/NHS 24 information, the practice website, patient-rights information, complaints route and recent patient feedback instead.

SCT

Scotland practice

Do not expect an English CQC inspection profile for this Edinburgh GP practice.

NHS

Use NHS 24 and practice pages

Check the NHS 24 service profile and the official practice website for live access information.

Com

Complaints route

If something goes wrong, use the official complaints route rather than only leaving a public review.

Fair

Read reviews fairly

Look for recent repeated themes about appointment access, communication, prescriptions and clinical care.

Scotland right care, right place video

This Scottish Government video is useful if you are unsure whether to contact the GP, NHS 24 on 111, A&E or 999. Mackenzie Medical Centre patients should still follow the practice’s own appointment instructions during opening hours.

Suggestions, complaints and what not to use the suggestions form for

The official suggestions and complaints page says suggestions are important, but medical matters and official complaints cannot be dealt with via the suggestions form. For medical matters, telephone reception to make an appointment with the appropriate person. For a complaint, collect a complaints form from reception or write to the Practice Manager.

1
Write a clear timeline.
Include dates, times, staff role if known, what happened, what harm or concern exists, and what outcome you want.
2
Use suggestions only for suggestions.
Do not send urgent medical information through a suggestions form.
3
Use the official complaints route.
Collect a complaints form from reception or write to the Practice Manager, Gillian Mossman, as stated on the official page.
4
Get consent if helping someone else.
The practice may need permission before discussing another patient’s care.

Mackenzie Medical Centre map, buses, parking and cycling

Address: Mackenzie Medical Centre, 20 West Richmond Street, Edinburgh, EH8 9DX. The practice says Bus Number 14 goes to West Richmond Street, and bus numbers 2, 3, 5, 7, 8, 21, 31, 33, 81, 87, 89 and X91 go to Nicolson Street. Parking meters are adjacent to the practice, and bike racks are near the entrance.

By bus

Check live Lothian bus times before travelling. Bus routes and stops can change.

By car

Parking meters are listed adjacent to the medical centre, but availability is not guaranteed.

By bike

Two bike rack locations are near the entrance; the practice says locks and lights are available at reception for patients attending an appointment.

If you are late

The official page says if you are late you may not be seen and may need to rearrange on the next working day unless there is a medical emergency.

What to do when Mackenzie Medical Centre is closed

Out-of-hours services are provided by NHS Lothian Unscheduled Care Services. If you need medical advice when the practice is closed between 18:00 and 08:00 on weekdays, at weekends or on public holidays, call NHS 24 on 111. If it is life-threatening, call 999.

ProblemUse this serviceExamples
Life or limb-threatening emergencyCall 999 or go to A&EChest pain, stroke signs, severe breathing difficulty, severe bleeding, severe injury, seizure, severe allergic reaction.
Urgent but not life-threateningNHS 24 on 111You are too ill to wait for the GP practice to open or think you may need A&E but it is not life-threatening.
Minor illnessLocal pharmacyCoughs, colds, sore throat, tummy trouble, aches and pains, emergency supply questions.
Dental problemDentist or NHS 24 when closedToothache, dental injury or mouth problems.
Eye problemOptometristRed eye, vision change, eye pain or floaters where emergency signs are absent.
Mental health distressNHS 24 on 111; 999 if immediate dangerYou feel unsafe, at risk of harm, or need urgent mental health help.

Official source check and reference notes

Official sources checked before writing: Mackenzie Medical Centre official homepage, appointments page, opening-hours page, prescriptions page, test-results page, new-patients page, sick/fit note page, patients’ rights and responsibilities page, suggestions and complaints page, NHS 24 service profile, NHS 24 Right Care Right Place guidance and CQC England scope information.

Official links: Official practice website · Appointments · Opening hours · Prescriptions · Test results · New patients · Sick/Fit notes · Patient rights · Suggestions and complaints · NHS 24 practice profile · NHS 24 on 111

Why this page is built this way: real users search walk-in, same-day GP, appointments, phone number, opening hours, repeat prescriptions, test results, fit notes, registration, interpreter help, CQC rating and directions. This guide answers those intents practically while still linking users to official sources for live confirmation.

Mackenzie Medical Centre FAQs

What is the phone number for Mackenzie Medical Centre?
The main appointment and practice number is 0131 651 1000. Use it for appointments, telephone triage, urgent same-day GP questions during opening hours, home visits, interpreter requests, cancellation and general practice access. For emergencies, call 999.
Where is Mackenzie Medical Centre?
Mackenzie Medical Centre is at 20 West Richmond Street, Edinburgh, EH8 9DX.
Is Mackenzie Medical Centre a walk-in clinic?
No, it should not be treated as a casual walk-in GP clinic. You can attend reception for help, but the official appointments page says if you wish to see a doctor or nurse you must make an appointment, either in person or by telephone.
Can I get a same-day GP appointment?
The practice’s patient rights page says urgent problems will be seen the same day by whichever doctor is available. Same-day access is based on medical urgency, not on walk-in order.
What are Mackenzie Medical Centre opening hours?
The official opening-hours page lists Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday from 08:00 to 18:00. Thursday is listed as 08:00 to 13:00 and 14:00 to 18:00, with closure from 13:00 to 14:00.
When are doctors and nurses available?
The official opening-hours page says doctors are available for consultation from 09:00 to 17:15 and nurse clinics from 08:00 to 16:00.
How do I book an appointment?
Call 0131 651 1000 or attend reception in person between 08:00 and 18:00 Monday to Friday. The call handler will ask for brief details so the practice can arrange the most appropriate professional.
How do telephone appointments work?
Telephone appointments can be made with the doctor. You will be asked for brief details and a contact telephone number, then given a one-hour time slot when the doctor or nurse will call you back.
Can I ask for a particular doctor?
Yes. The official appointments page says if you wish to see a particular doctor, tell the receptionist. You may need to wait until that doctor is available.
How do I order repeat prescriptions?
Use online services through Patient Services, call 0131 650 2674 Monday to Friday from 14:00 to 15:00, or place a written request in the prescription box in the practice lobby. Use your re-ordering slip where possible.
How long do repeat prescriptions take?
The official prescriptions page says to allow 48 hours before collection.
What is the Mackenzie Medical Centre prescription phone number?
The repeat prescription phone number is 0131 650 2674, available Monday to Friday from 14:00 to 15:00.
How do I get test results?
For tests carried out at the practice, call 0131 651 4145 between 09:00 and 11:00. Reception staff can pass on results that have been cleared by the doctor.
Can Mackenzie Medical Centre give hospital test results?
The official test-results page says the practice cannot pass on results of tests taken outside the practice. Contact the clinic or hospital where the tests were taken.
How do I request a sick note or fit note?
If you are off work for seven days or less, use self-certification. If you are off work for more than seven days, you may need a medical certificate. If the practice or hospital has not already assessed the illness, you may need a routine appointment.
Does Mackenzie Medical Centre offer home visits?
Home visits should be requested only if the patient is too ill or infirm to come to the surgery. The practice asks patients to telephone before 10:30 where possible.
Is Mackenzie Medical Centre accepting new patients?
The official new-patients page says the practice is open for new patient registrations, but you must ensure your address is within the catchment area before registering.
Can medical students register at Mackenzie Medical Centre?
The official new-patients page says the practice cannot accept medical students.
Does Mackenzie Medical Centre have disabled access?
The official homepage says there is disabled access via ramp and automatic doors, and an induction loop at reception for people with impaired hearing.
Can I get an interpreter?
Yes. The practice says if you require an interpreter to attend your appointment, notify reception and they will arrange this for you.
What is the CQC rating for Mackenzie Medical Centre?
CQC is the regulator for health and social care services in England. Mackenzie Medical Centre is in Scotland, so a CQC rating is not the correct quality check for this practice.
What should I do when Mackenzie Medical Centre is closed?
Call NHS 24 on 111 if you need urgent medical advice when the practice is closed. Call 999 for life-threatening emergencies.
Is this the official Mackenzie Medical Centre website?
No. This is an independent patient guide on medicalpracticeuk.org. Use the official practice website, NHS 24, NHS Inform and emergency services for final live details.
Independent directory disclaimer: medicalpracticeuk.org is not NHS Scotland, not NHS Lothian, not NHS 24, not CQC and not Mackenzie Medical Centre. This guide is for general patient information only. Opening hours, appointment systems, same-day access, prescription routes, phone lines, registration, interpreter support, public holidays and service details can change. Always confirm important details with the official practice website, NHS 24, NHS Inform, the surgery, or emergency services before relying on them.
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