Searching for Aramoho Medical Centre in Whanganui? The official clinic name is Aramoho Health Centre. This guide helps you quickly choose the right next step: call reception, book an appointment, use ManageMyHealth, request a repeat prescription, check fees, understand enrolment, use Practice Plus, call Healthline, or go straight to emergency help.
This is an independent patient information guide, not the official Aramoho Health Centre website. It is built for verified patient usefulness, clear next-step routing, mobile readability and entity clarity. For final appointments, fees, prescriptions, clinical advice and urgent instructions, confirm directly with Aramoho Health Centre.
Emergency warning: In New Zealand, call 111 for life-threatening symptoms, serious injury, chest pain, stroke signs, severe breathing problems, collapse or immediate ambulance, police or fire help. For free non-emergency health advice when you are worried or unsure, call Healthline 0800 611 116.
What should you do first for Aramoho Medical Centre?
Most people landing on this page need a practical answer quickly. They may need a GP appointment, a repeat prescription, a nurse clinic, test-result help, fees, enrolment information, after-hours advice, or urgent care. Start with the safest route below.
Call 111. Do not wait for email, portal messages, repeat prescription requests or a routine GP appointment.
Phone (06) 343 9050. Explain symptoms, timing and whether the problem is worsening.
Call Healthline 0800 611 116, use Practice Plus where suitable, or contact Whanganui Accident and Medical.
Use ManageMyHealth if registered, or call reception during weekday clinic hours.
Aramoho Medical Centre quick answer for Whanganui patients
Aramoho Medical Centre is commonly searched under that name, but the official clinic name is Aramoho Health Centre. The official contact page lists the clinic at 144 Somme Parade, Aramoho, Whanganui, phone (06) 343 9050, fax (06) 343 9045 and email admin@aramohohealth.co.nz.
The official clinic hours are Monday to Friday, 8:30am–5:00pm. The clinic lists after-hours help through Whanganui Accident and Medical, phone (06) 348 1300, and also lists Healthline 0800 611 116 for free health advice.
Aramoho Health Centre uses ManageMyHealth. Once registered, patients can book appointments, request repeat prescriptions, view lab results, view immunisation records, send secure messages and update personal records. Some portal services may not be available and some may have a fee.
Aramoho Health Centre tools for appointments, prescriptions and after-hours decisions
These tools do not diagnose illness, suggest treatment or decide whether medicine is safe. They only help you choose the right official contact route and prepare better before calling, using ManageMyHealth or attending after-hours care.
Tool 1: next-step finder
Choose your situation. The result gives route guidance only.
Your route will appear here
Select both fields. The tool will show general contact-route guidance, not medical advice.
- Emergency symptoms should go to 111.
- Same-day concerns are usually better handled by phone.
- Routine portal tasks may suit ManageMyHealth if you are registered.
Tool 2: repeat prescription readiness checker
Use this before requesting a repeat prescription so you do not leave medicine planning too late.
Prescription guidance will appear here
Aramoho Health Centre lists standard prescription processing at 48 hours and urgent prescriptions at 24 hours if available. Fees differ, so request early where possible.
Tool 3: appointment preparation builder
Pick your appointment type and prepare the right details before contacting reception.
Your checklist will appear here
This helps reduce common mistakes such as using email for urgent symptoms, leaving prescriptions too late, or expecting a nurse-led urgent clinic to replace A&E.
Aramoho Health Centre opening hours, phone, email and address
The official contact page lists Aramoho Health Centre as open Monday to Friday, 8:30am–5:00pm. It also lists public-holiday closures including Wellington Anniversary Day, Waitangi Day, Good Friday, Easter Monday, ANZAC Day, Queen’s Birthday, Labour Day, Christmas Day, Boxing Day, New Year’s Day and New Year’s Day Holiday.
Healthpoint lists the same address and phone number, and provides the Healthlink EDI as aramohoh. If you are a health provider sending information, use the verified EDI details rather than guessing from the clinic name.
How to book an Aramoho Medical Centre appointment without choosing the wrong route
Aramoho Health Centre offers GP and nurse appointments, and the official home page says ManageMyHealth can be used for booking once registered. The safest route depends on whether the issue is urgent, routine, related to test results, nurse-led care, repeat medication, or after-hours advice.
If your issue is acute and the clinic cannot offer a GP appointment, the official service page says nurse-led urgent clinics are available to the enrolled population. These clinics are for acute conditions where it is advisable to be seen by a health professional, but the clinic clearly states they are not a substitute for A&E.
Decide whether this is emergency, urgent, routine or after-hours
Call 111 for emergency symptoms. Phone the clinic for same-day concerns during opening hours. Use Healthline or after-hours options when the clinic is closed.
Use ManageMyHealth for suitable routine tasks
Registered patients can use ManageMyHealth for appointments, repeat prescriptions, lab results and secure messages where available.
Phone if symptoms are new, worsening or unclear
Portal messages and email are not the safest way to handle worsening symptoms, urgent illness, severe pain, breathing issues, chest pain, injury or serious concern.
Ask reception which appointment type is right
Nurse clinic, GP appointment, phone consultation, test-result discussion, blood test, cervical screening, diabetes clinic, spirometry or minor procedure may use different booking routes.
Bring the right information
Have your NHI, medication list, allergies, Community Services Card, forms, test details and symptom timing ready before you call or attend.
ManageMyHealth at Aramoho Health Centre
Aramoho Health Centre’s ManageMyHealth page says registered patients can access services such as viewing medical records, booking appointments, requesting repeat prescriptions, viewing lab results, sending secure messages, viewing immunisation records, managing health goals and updating personal records.
The same page notes that patients need to be registered with Aramoho Health, need a personal email address, and need to provide proof of identity. Patients may also be contacted by the practice to verify identity or confirm other medical details.
Good uses for ManageMyHealth
- Routine appointment booking where available.
- Repeat prescription requests when suitable.
- Viewing lab results and immunisation records.
- Secure messages when the issue is appropriate and not urgent.
- Updating personal records and managing health goals.
Phone instead of using the portal when
- You have severe or worsening symptoms.
- You may need urgent care today.
- Your medicine has changed or caused side effects.
- You need a nurse-led urgent clinic or after-hours advice.
- You are not registered or your identity has not been verified.
Repeat prescriptions at Aramoho Health Centre
Aramoho Health Centre lists standard prescription fees at $23.00 with 48 hours processing time. It also lists urgent prescription fees at $31.00, with 24 hours processing if available.
Repeat prescriptions are not a same-as-usual guarantee. Your prescriber may need to review medication, results, blood pressure, blood tests, side effects, dose changes or whether an appointment is due. If medication has changed or symptoms are new, phone rather than relying only on a routine repeat request.
Before requesting a repeat
- Request early and allow at least 48 hours where possible.
- Have medicine names, doses and pharmacy details ready.
- Check whether a review appointment or blood test is due.
- Use ManageMyHealth if registered and the request is suitable.
- Phone if the prescription is urgent or medicine has changed.
Urgent prescription warning
The official fee page says urgent prescriptions are available within 24 hours if available. This means patients should not wait until medicine has run out. Urgent processing can cost more and may not always be possible.
Aramoho Health Centre fees patients usually want first
Aramoho Health Centre’s official fee page says prices are effective from September 2024. Fees can change, and some services may have extra charges, so always confirm before booking, especially for surgery, forms, home visits, medical certificates, vaccines and urgent prescriptions.
Other listed fee examples
- Liquid nitrogen: $28.00.
- ECG: $42.00.
- Blood pressure check: $21.00.
- Blood test: $21.00.
- Punch biopsy: $85.00.
- Surgery: from $250.00.
- Driver’s medical: $100.00.
- Form completion: $27.00–$40.00.
- Medical certificates: $15.00.
Payment note
The official fee page lists online banking to BNZ Whanganui: 02 0792 0126479 000, with surname and first name in particulars, address as code, and chart number as reference if known. Confirm payment details directly before sending money because bank details can change.
Is Aramoho Medical Centre enrolling new patients?
The Doctors network listing for Aramoho Health Centre shows Enrolment Limited. That means patients should not assume open enrolment just because the clinic has an enrolment link. Enrolment availability can change and may depend on capacity, eligibility and clinical circumstances.
If you want to enrol, use the official enrolment route or phone reception. If you need medical help before enrolment is confirmed, do not wait if symptoms are urgent. Use Healthline, Practice Plus, Whanganui Accident and Medical or 111 depending on severity.
Before trying to enrol
- Check whether enrolment is currently available.
- Ask what “enrolment limited” means for your situation.
- Prepare ID, eligibility details and previous GP information.
- Ask how ManageMyHealth registration works after enrolment.
- Ask what to do if you need care before enrolment is complete.
If you are not enrolled and need help now
Do not wait for enrolment paperwork if symptoms are urgent. Phone Healthline, use after-hours care, or call 111 depending on severity. For routine continuity, complete enrolment and book with the clinic when accepted.
After-hours care when Aramoho Health Centre is closed
Aramoho Health Centre lists after-hours care through Whanganui Accident and Medical, phone (06) 348 1300. The clinic also lists Healthline 0800 611 116 for free health advice.
Aramoho Health Centre also promotes Practice Plus for same-day virtual after-hours GP appointments. The Practice Plus page says it is available weekdays 5pm–8pm and weekends/public holidays 8am–8pm. It lists pricing as $79 for ages 14 and over, $59 for ages 13 and under, $21 for Community Services Card holders, and $150 for international patients.
Use 111 for emergencies
Call 111 immediately for severe, sudden, life-threatening or unsafe symptoms. Do not wait for the clinic to reopen.
Use Healthline when unsure
Healthline is a safe first call when the clinic is closed, the issue is not clearly an emergency, and you need free health advice.
Use Whanganui Accident and Medical for physical urgent care
If you need face-to-face after-hours assessment, the clinic lists Whanganui Accident and Medical on (06) 348 1300.
Use Practice Plus for suitable virtual care
Practice Plus may suit some after-hours advice, prescriptions or certificates, but it is not a substitute for emergency care or a physical exam when one is needed.
GP services, nurse clinics and wellbeing support at Aramoho Health Centre
Aramoho Health Centre’s service pages list GP and nurse care, blood testing services, cervical screening, diabetes clinics, nurse-led urgent clinics, spirometry clinic, immunisations, vaccines, prescription services, wellness checks, mental health assessment, minor surgical procedures, skin checks, blood pressure checks, ECG, B12 injections, liquid nitrogen and lifestyle advice such as weight management and smoking cessation.
The wellbeing page also describes the Te Kapa Waiora Wellbeing Team, with Health Improvement Practitioners and a Health Coach supporting patients with practical, collaborative wellbeing support as part of integrated primary mental health and addiction care.
General practice
Use for routine GP care, follow-up, chronic-condition management, medication review, test discussions and ongoing health needs.
Nurse-led urgent clinics
Available to enrolled patients when a GP appointment cannot be offered for acute conditions. Not a substitute for A&E.
Test results
Aramoho says it will notify patients only if results are abnormal or further action is needed. You can also use ManageMyHealth or phone a nurse.
Cervical screening
Booked through reception with trained cervical screening nurses.
Spirometry clinic
Spirometry testing is performed by a fully certified nurse and may be used to diagnose or monitor lung conditions such as COPD.
Wellbeing team
Health Improvement Practitioners and a Health Coach provide practical wellbeing support alongside the GP and nurse team.
Aramoho Medical Centre, Aramoho Health Centre, Practice Plus and A&M are different routes
People may search “Aramoho Medical Centre,” but the official clinic name is Aramoho Health Centre. After-hours, virtual care, accident and medical care, and emergency care are separate routes. Choosing the right one helps avoid delay.
Aramoho Health Centre
Use for GP appointments, nurse clinics, repeat prescriptions, test results, fees, enrolment, ManageMyHealth and routine continuity.
Practice Plus
Use for suitable virtual after-hours GP consultations where a physical examination is not required.
Whanganui Accident and Medical
Use for after-hours face-to-face urgent assessment when appropriate. Aramoho lists phone (06) 348 1300.
Healthline
Use for free health advice when unsure, especially when the clinic is closed and it is not clearly a 111 emergency.
ManageMyHealth
Use for suitable registered-patient tasks such as appointments, repeats, lab results and secure messages.
Emergency services
Use 111 for life-threatening symptoms, not email, portal messages, Practice Plus or routine appointments.
Patient checklist before contacting Aramoho Health Centre
A good checklist prevents wrong-route calls, avoidable delays and surprise costs. Prepare the basics before phoning, booking through ManageMyHealth, requesting a repeat prescription or attending a nurse clinic.
Before calling
- Write your main reason in one sentence.
- Note when symptoms started and whether they are worsening.
- Have medicine names, doses and allergies ready.
- Know whether you need GP, nurse, prescription, test result, fee, form or after-hours advice.
- Have your NHI number and Community Services Card ready if available.
Before visiting
- Confirm your appointment time and service type.
- Bring ID, payment method and relevant cards.
- Bring forms, hospital letters, medicine bottles or test details.
- Ask about fees for extra services, surgery, forms, certificates or home visits.
- Call first if symptoms are urgent, infectious or worsening.
Common mistakes that cause delays, wrong calls or extra costs
- Searching the wrong name: the official clinic is Aramoho Health Centre, even though many users search Aramoho Medical Centre.
- Emailing urgent symptoms: email is not a safe route for time-critical symptoms.
- Waiting until medicine runs out: standard prescriptions require 48 hours, and urgent 24-hour processing is only if available.
- Using nurse-led urgent clinics as A&E: the official service page says these are not a substitute for A&E.
- Assuming enrolment is open: network listing shows enrolment limited, so confirm before relying on availability.
- Ignoring abnormal or ongoing symptoms after test results: the clinic says patients can still contact the practice if they continue to feel unwell.
- Using Practice Plus when a physical exam is needed: virtual care is useful for some issues but not for every symptom.
- Treating this guide as medical advice: this page is informational only and does not replace a qualified health professional.
Aramoho Health Centre address and map
Aramoho Health Centre is listed at 144 Somme Parade, Aramoho, Whanganui 4500. Use the map before travelling, especially if you searched “Aramoho Medical Centre” and want to make sure you are going to the correct official clinic.
Aramoho Medical Centre frequently asked questions
Is Aramoho Medical Centre the same as Aramoho Health Centre?
People often search “Aramoho Medical Centre,” but the official clinic name is Aramoho Health Centre. This guide uses both names for clarity and points users to the official Aramoho Health Centre website.
What is Aramoho Health Centre’s phone number?
The listed phone number is (06) 343 9050.
Where is Aramoho Health Centre located?
Aramoho Health Centre is located at 144 Somme Parade, Aramoho, Whanganui 4500.
What are Aramoho Health Centre opening hours?
The official contact page lists Monday to Friday, 8:30am–5:00pm. The clinic is closed on listed public holidays.
Does Aramoho Health Centre use ManageMyHealth?
Yes. Registered patients can use ManageMyHealth for services such as booking appointments, requesting repeat prescriptions, viewing lab results, viewing records and sending secure messages where available.
How much is a standard consultation at Aramoho Health Centre?
The official fee page lists standard adult consultations at $57.00, 14–17-year-old consultations at $30.00, and 0–13-year-old consultations at no charge. Confirm current fees directly before booking.
How long do repeat prescriptions take?
The official fee page lists standard repeat prescriptions at $23.00 with 48 hours processing. Urgent prescriptions are listed at $31.00 within 24 hours if available.
Is Aramoho Health Centre accepting new enrolments?
The Doctors network listing shows Aramoho Health Centre as “Enrolment Limited.” Confirm directly with the clinic before assuming enrolment is available.
What should I do after hours?
For emergencies, call 111. For free health advice, call Healthline 0800 611 116. Aramoho lists Whanganui Accident and Medical on (06) 348 1300 for after-hours care, and Practice Plus for suitable virtual after-hours consultations.
Is this the official Aramoho Health Centre website?
No. This is an independent patient information guide. For appointments, fees, clinical advice, enrolment, prescriptions and urgent instructions, use the official Aramoho Health Centre website or phone the clinic directly.
Sources, accuracy note and independent-guide disclaimer
This guide summarises public information from Aramoho Health Centre, Healthpoint, The Doctors network and official New Zealand health sources. Clinic information can change. Always confirm current appointment availability, fees, enrolment status, opening hours, prescription rules, after-hours options and urgent-care instructions directly with Aramoho Health Centre or official health services.
Independent guide: Medical Centre NZ is not Aramoho Health Centre. This page does not provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. It helps patients find the right official contact route and prepare better questions.
- Official Aramoho Health Centre website
- Official contact and after-hours page
- Official fees page
- Official services page
- Official ManageMyHealth information page
- Official Practice Plus information page
- Official nurse-led urgent clinics page
- Healthpoint listing for Aramoho Health Centre
- Healthline — Health New Zealand
- 111 emergency service — New Zealand Government
Last reviewed: 1 June 2026. Re-check official pages before future edits, especially fees, enrolment status, prescription processing, public-holiday closures, after-hours routing and portal instructions.
Final recommendation
For routine Aramoho Health Centre care, phone (06) 343 9050 or use ManageMyHealth if you are registered and the task is suitable. For same-day illness or unclear symptoms, phone rather than relying on email or portal messages. For after-hours non-emergency advice, call Healthline or use the official after-hours options. For emergency symptoms in New Zealand, call 111 immediately.