Searching for Waiuku Medical Centre? The current public clinic entity is Waiuku Health Centre at Constable Road, Waiuku. Use this guide to call the practice, check opening hours, use MyIndici, request repeat prescriptions, understand fees, check limited enrolment, find after-hours virtual GP care and choose the safest next step.
This page is independent. It is built for verified patient usefulness, clear next-step routing, mobile readability and entity clarity. It does not provide diagnosis or treatment advice.
Emergency warning: In New Zealand, call 111 for life-threatening symptoms or emergency help. For free non-emergency health advice when you are worried or unsure, call Healthline 0800 611 116.
What should you do first for Waiuku Medical Centre?
A patient searching for Waiuku Medical Centre usually wants a fast next step, not a long directory page. Start with the safest route below.
Call 111. Do not wait for a portal message, contact form, email reply or routine appointment.
Phone 09 235 9102. Waiuku Health Centre says urgent attention should be handled by phone.
Call Healthline 0800 611 116 or use Ka Ora Telecare if suitable for enrolled patients.
Use MyIndici where suitable, or call reception. Repeat prescriptions need 3 working days.
Waiuku Medical Centre quick answer for local patients
Waiuku Medical Centre is commonly searched under that name, but the official public clinic name is Waiuku Health Centre. The official contact page lists the clinic at 30/26–30 Constable Road, Waiuku, phone 09 235 9102, fax 09 235 8827, and postal address PO Box 227, Waiuku 2123.
The official homepage lists opening hours as Monday to Friday 8:30am–5pm, Saturday 8:30am–1pm, Sunday closed and public holidays closed. Healthpoint also lists Monday to Friday 8:30am–5pm and Saturday 8:30am–1pm.
The clinic uses MyIndici for patient portal access. The official homepage says MyIndici lets patients book appointments, request repeat prescriptions, view lab results and receive communications from the practice. It also says MyIndici replaces ManageMyHealth, so patients who previously used ManageMyHealth need to switch to MyIndici for portal services.
Waiuku Medical Centre patient tools before you call
These tools do not diagnose symptoms, suggest treatment or decide whether you need medicine. They only help you choose a safer contact route: 111, Healthline, Waiuku Health Centre phone, MyIndici, Ka Ora Telecare or routine appointment preparation.
Tool 1: next-step finder
Your route will appear here
Select both fields. The tool will show general contact-route guidance only.
- Emergencies should go to 111.
- Same-day concerns are usually safer by phone.
- Routine online tasks may suit MyIndici after registration.
Tool 2: repeat prescription readiness checker
Prescription guidance will appear here
The official repeat prescription page says repeat prescribing is for long-term medicines between review appointments and the practice requires 3 working days to action requests.
Tool 3: appointment preparation builder
Your checklist will appear here
This helps reduce mistakes such as booking too late for a routine review, using the wrong channel for infectious symptoms, or leaving repeat prescriptions until the last day.
Opening hours, phone, email and contact route
Waiuku Health Centre’s official homepage lists weekday hours as 8:30am–5pm, Saturday hours as 8:30am–1pm, Sunday closed and public holidays closed. The contact form page says the form is checked during working hours Monday to Friday 8:30am–5pm and Saturday 8:30am–12:30pm.
The contact page gives an important urgent-care warning: if you require an urgent reply or urgent attention, contact the practice by phone on 09 235 9102. Do not rely on an online form, email or portal message for urgent symptoms.
How to book the right Waiuku Health Centre appointment
Waiuku Health Centre says it will try to find an appointment with your own GP first, but another provider may be offered if your GP is fully booked. It also says telephone appointments with a GP locum may be offered when fitted to your need. These locums can access records, issue prescriptions, action referrals and complete forms in the usual way.
For routine appointments such as medication reviews, the official services page advises booking at least 4 weeks ahead. For clinically urgent needs, the clinic has a limited number of same-day appointments for enrolled patients, managed through triage.
Decide whether this is emergency, urgent or routine
Call 111 for emergency symptoms. Phone the clinic for urgent same-day needs. Use Healthline when the clinic is closed and you are unsure what to do.
Use triage for clinically urgent needs
The clinic says urgent same-day appointments are managed by triage, and you may be assessed by phone by a nurse or telehealth GP before an appointment is offered.
Do not walk in for the infectious-symptom clinic
The official site describes a drive-through clinic for infectious symptoms such as cough, fever and rash. It is appointment-based, not walk-in.
Book routine reviews early
Medication reviews and other routine appointments should be planned ahead. The clinic advises booking at least 4 weeks ahead for routine appointments such as medication reviews.
Prepare before attending
Bring medicine details, allergies, recent letters, ID if requested, Community Services Card if relevant, and any forms. Tell reception if you need translator, chaperone, transport or payment support.
MyIndici, appointments, lab results and repeat prescriptions
Waiuku Health Centre uses MyIndici as its patient portal. The official homepage says MyIndici lets patients book appointments, request repeat prescriptions, view lab results and receive practice communications. It also says MyIndici replaces ManageMyHealth.
The official repeat prescription page says repeat prescribing is for long-term medicines between review appointments. It may not be appropriate if you have not seen your doctor for 6 months or more, or if lab tests, physical examination or symptom checks are required.
Good uses for MyIndici
- Routine appointment booking where suitable.
- Repeat prescription requests when 3 working days is acceptable.
- Viewing lab results after practice review.
- Receiving communications from the practice.
Phone instead when
- You need urgent attention or same-day advice.
- You are nearly out of medicine.
- Your medicine changed or caused new symptoms.
- You have not seen your doctor for 6 months or more.
- You may need tests, physical examination or symptom review.
Repeat prescription timing
The official repeat prescription page says the practice has high volumes of repeat prescribing and requires 3 working days to action requests. It suggests setting a reminder to reorder medicines 2 weeks before you run out.
Fees and charges patients usually search for first
Fees can change, and final charges depend on age, enrolment, Community Services Card status, casual status, ACC, triage type, nurse service, procedure, materials and paperwork. Use the examples below from the official fee page reviewed for this guide, then confirm directly before booking.
The official fee page says payment is required in full at the time of consultation, and additional fees apply for minor surgery, medicals, nurse consultations, letters, reports, procedures and materials.
Waiuku Health Centre enrolment criteria and who should check first
Waiuku Health Centre’s enrolment page says limited enrolment is available. It says the practice is open for enrolment to people eligible for publicly funded healthcare in New Zealand who meet specific criteria.
The criteria include recently lapsed enrolees who have not enrolled elsewhere and who live within a 15 km radius of Waiuku, extended to the top of the Awhitu Peninsula and listed nearby locations. It also includes residents at CHT Waiuku or Glenbrook Rest Home, babies born to enrolled patients, and family members of enrolled patients living at the same address within the catchment area.
Before trying to enrol
- Check whether you meet the limited enrolment criteria.
- Confirm catchment and eligibility directly with the clinic.
- Prepare an enrolment form and medical questionnaire if eligible.
- Bring required identity documents such as passport, birth certificate or NZ Gold Card.
- Remember individual forms are required for all family members.
Important enrolment wording
Enrolment includes enrolling with a Primary Health Organisation. Waiuku Health Centre says it belongs to The Cause Collective PHO. If you are unsure whether you are funded, enrolled elsewhere or within catchment, phone the practice before preparing paperwork.
After-hours care for Waiuku patients
Waiuku Health Centre says that when it is closed, patients may access same-day phone or video consultations with Ka Ora Telecare. Healthpoint lists Ka Ora Telecare availability for enrolled patients as weekdays from 5pm to 8:30am and 24/7 on weekends and public holidays.
Ka Ora is useful for some same-day virtual GP needs, but it is not a replacement for emergency services. If symptoms are severe, sudden, unsafe, life-threatening or you are unsure whether an ambulance is needed, call 111.
Call 111 immediately
Use 111 for severe, sudden, life-threatening, unsafe or rapidly worsening symptoms, or if you cannot decide whether it is an emergency.
Call Healthline
Use Healthline 0800 611 116 for free non-emergency health advice when you are worried, unsure, cannot access a GP, or need medicine advice.
Ka Ora Telecare
Use for suitable same-day phone or video GP consultations when the clinic is closed and your need can safely be handled virtually. Ka Ora phone is listed as 0800 252 672.
Routine tasks can wait
Routine medication reviews, forms, non-urgent repeat prescriptions and standard follow-ups are usually better handled with Waiuku Health Centre during opening hours.
GP services, nurse care, minor surgery and local support
Waiuku Health Centre’s service pages list general and family medicine, health checks, accident and emergency care, preventative medicine, wound dressings, telephone advice, medical checks, immunisations, minor surgery, women’s health, men’s health, children’s health, specialised tests and treatments, visiting specialists, long-term conditions, residential care and palliative care.
The clinic also describes a Health Improvement Programme where patients can work with a registered nurse, Health Improvement Practitioner or Health Coach to set goals and support health changes. Examples include weight loss, stopping smoking, diabetes control, breathing-condition management, mobility and coping at home.
General GP care
Use for routine health concerns, medication reviews, follow-ups, referrals, forms and long-term condition care.
Same-day triage
Limited same-day appointments are for enrolled patients with clinically urgent needs and may be triaged by nurse or telehealth GP first.
Immunisations
The service page lists childhood, catch-up, flu, COVID and travel vaccinations. Ask about eligibility and current availability.
Minor surgery
The minor surgery page lists skin cancer, moles, cysts and ingrown toenails, with an initial consultation for procedure explanation, cost and consent.
Specialised tests
Listed services include liquid nitrogen, spirometry, ECG, tympanogram, skin and mole checks, CVD risk assessment, osteoporosis infusions and iron infusions.
Associated services
The associated services page lists visiting or local services such as counselling, orthopaedic surgeon, podiatrist, psychologist, physiotherapy, pharmacy and Awanui Labs.
Clinic, MyIndici, pharmacy, Awanui Labs or Ka Ora — which one should you use?
This page targets the search phrase “Waiuku Medical Centre,” but the official clinic entity is Waiuku Health Centre. A patient may also need the MyIndici portal, the Unichem pharmacy, Awanui Labs, Ka Ora Telecare, Healthline or 111.
Use Waiuku Health Centre
For GP appointments, triage, enrolment, fees, medical forms, prescriptions, service routing and clinical follow-up.
Use MyIndici
For suitable routine booking, repeat prescription requests, lab results and practice communications after registration.
Use the pharmacy
For dispensing, collection, medicine reminders and pharmacy stock questions after your prescription has been sent.
Use Awanui Labs
The associated services page lists Awanui Labs at 30 Constable Road, weekdays 7:00am–2:45pm, closed public holidays.
Use Ka Ora or Healthline
For after-hours virtual GP needs or non-emergency advice when the clinic is closed and you are unsure what to do.
Use 111
For life-threatening symptoms, serious injury, severe distress or any situation where waiting is unsafe.
Patient checklist before you call, book or attend
A clear checklist reduces repeat calls, missed details and wrong-route decisions. Use this before phoning, booking through MyIndici or attending the clinic.
Before calling
- Write your main reason in one short sentence.
- Note when symptoms started and whether they are improving or worsening.
- Have medicine names, allergies and important conditions ready.
- Say clearly if there is cough, fever, rash or infectious symptoms.
- Ask whether you need GP, nurse, triage, telehealth, lab, pharmacy or after-hours care.
Before visiting
- Confirm appointment time and whether it is in-person, phone or triage.
- Bring ID, Community Services Card and eligibility documents if relevant.
- Bring forms, letters, discharge summaries or test details.
- Bring a medicine list and recent pharmacy changes.
- Tell reception early if transport, cost, interpreter or chaperone support is needed.
Common mistakes that cause delays or wrong routing
- Searching the old/common name only: the official public entity is Waiuku Health Centre, although many users search Waiuku Medical Centre.
- Using the contact form for urgent attention: the contact page says urgent replies or urgent attention should go through the practice phone number.
- Leaving repeats too late: the repeat prescription page says to allow 3 working days and suggests reordering 2 weeks before running out.
- Assuming a repeat is automatic: the official page says repeats may not be appropriate if review, lab tests, physical exam or symptom check is needed.
- Walking into the infectious-symptom clinic: the clinic says the drive-through clinic is appointment-based, not walk-in.
- Booking routine medication reviews too late: the official services page advises booking routine appointments such as medication reviews at least 4 weeks ahead.
- Confusing the clinic and pharmacy: appointment and prescribing decisions go through the clinic; dispensing and collection questions go to the pharmacy.
- Using this page as medical advice: this page is an independent guide only.
Waiuku Health Centre address and map
Waiuku Health Centre is listed at 30/26–30 Constable Road, Waiuku, Auckland 2123. Check your appointment reminder, the official website and the map before travelling, especially on Saturdays or near public holidays.
Waiuku Medical Centre frequently asked questions
Is Waiuku Medical Centre the same as Waiuku Health Centre?
People often search “Waiuku Medical Centre,” but the official public clinic name is Waiuku Health Centre.
What is Waiuku Health Centre’s phone number?
The official contact number is 09 235 9102.
Where is Waiuku Health Centre located?
The clinic is listed at 30/26–30 Constable Road, Waiuku, Auckland 2123.
What are Waiuku Health Centre opening hours?
The official homepage lists Monday to Friday 8:30am–5pm, Saturday 8:30am–1pm, Sunday closed and public holidays closed.
Can I use the online form for urgent attention?
No. The official contact page says if you require an urgent reply or urgent attention, you should contact the practice by phone on 09 235 9102.
Does Waiuku Health Centre use MyIndici?
Yes. The official homepage says the MyIndici app allows patients to book appointments, request repeat prescriptions, view lab results and receive communications from the practice.
How long do repeat prescriptions take?
The official repeat prescription page says the practice requires 3 working days to action repeat prescription requests.
Is Waiuku Health Centre accepting new enrolments?
The official enrolment page says limited enrolment is available for people eligible for publicly funded healthcare in New Zealand who meet specific criteria, including catchment and other listed conditions.
What after-hours care is listed for Waiuku patients?
The official homepage and Healthpoint list Ka Ora Telecare for same-day phone or video consultations when Waiuku Health Centre is closed. Healthpoint lists Ka Ora availability weekdays 5pm–8:30am and 24/7 weekends and public holidays.
Is this the official Waiuku Health Centre website?
No. This is an independent patient guide. For appointments, clinical advice, fees, prescriptions and urgent instructions, use the official Waiuku Health Centre website or phone the clinic directly.
Sources, accuracy note and independent-guide disclaimer
This guide summarises public information from Waiuku Health Centre, Healthpoint, MyIndici, Ka Ora Telecare, Healthline and New Zealand emergency information. Clinic details can change. Always confirm appointment availability, fees, enrolment, portal access, prescription rules, Saturday hours, public holiday changes and urgent-care instructions directly with the clinic.
Independent guide: Medical Centre NZ is not Waiuku Health Centre. This page does not provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. It is designed to help patients find official contact routes and prepare better questions.
- Official Waiuku Health Centre website
- Official contact page
- Official repeat prescriptions page
- Official fees page
- Official new enrolments page
- Official general services page
- Official minor surgery page
- Official health improvement clinic page
- Healthpoint listing for Waiuku Health Centre
- Ka Ora Telecare
- Healthline — Health New Zealand
- 111 emergency service — New Zealand Government
Last reviewed: 1 June 2026. Re-check official pages before major edits, especially fees, enrolment rules, prescription timing, after-hours routing and public holiday hours.
Final recommendation
For routine GP care at Waiuku Health Centre, phone 09 235 9102 or use MyIndici if the task is suitable. For urgent same-day concerns, phone the practice and clearly explain symptoms. For after-hours non-emergency care, use Healthline or Ka Ora Telecare where appropriate. For emergency symptoms in New Zealand, call 111 immediately.