Skip to main content
  • Language
    • Afrikaans
    • Albanian
    • Arabic
    • Armenian
    • Azerbaijani
    • Basque
    • Belarusian
    • Bengali
    • Bulgarian
    • Catalan
    • Chinese (Simplified)
    • Chinese (Traditional)
    • Croatian
    • Czech
    • Danish
    • Dutch
    • Esperanto
    • Estonian
    • Filipino
    • Finnish
    • French
    • Galician
    • Georgian
    • German
    • Greek
    • Gujarati
    • Haitian Creole
    • Hebrew
    • Hindi
    • Hungarian
    • Icelandic
    • Indonesian
    • Irish
    • Italian
    • Japanese
    • Kannada
    • Korean
    • Lao
    • Latin
    • Latvian
    • Lithuanian
    • Macedonian
    • Malay
    • Maltese
    • Norwegian
    • Persian
    • Polish
    • Portuguese
    • Punjabi
    • Romanian
    • Russian
    • Serbian
    • Slovak
    • Slovenian
    • Spanish
    • Swahili
    • Swedish
    • Tamil
    • Telugu
    • Thai
    • Turkish
    • Ukrainian
    • Urdu
    • Vietnamese
    • Welsh
    • Yiddish
  • 020 8854 2042
  • Text Size
    • Increase Text Size
    • Decrease Text Size
    • Reset Text Size
Conway PMS Providing NHS services
Providing NHS services
Search
Show Main Menu
  • Home
  • Appointments
  • Prescriptions
  • Surgery Times
  • Practice News
  • Contact Us
Show Side Menu
NHS 111 - if it's less urgent than 999
New Patient Registration
Practice Booklet (DOCX, 361KB)
Join Patient Participation Group

Key Information

  • Administration Forms
  • Appointments
  • Pharmacy First
  • Carers
  • Clinicians & Practice Team
  • COVID-19 & Flu
  • Fit notes & Sick notes
  • Friends and Family Test
  • GDPR
  • Health Review Forms
  • Home Visits
  • Practice Information
  • Prescriptions
  • Practice Policies
  • Referrals
  • Self-Help and Support Centre
  • Tests and Results
  • Times
  • Zero Tolerance
  • Proxy Access
  • Weight Loss Injections Mounjaro
  • Sick Day Rules
  • Vaccinations
  • Live Well
  • Conditions A to Z

BBC Health News

  • Why you might not be buying the right pain relief for period cramps15 Jun 2026 00:10Many women are buying less effective pain medication for period cramps, supermarket data suggests.
  • Resident doctors cancel strike after new offer from government13 Jun 2026 21:46The walkout had been due to start at 07:00 BST on Monday and last until Friday.
  • 'I've never been this good' – revolutionary immune reset puts lupus in remission12 Jun 2026 00:31Patients on the trial have not needed medication to manage their condition.
  • 'I spent uni savings on getting my teeth fixed' - the real cost of NHS dentist shortage12 Jun 2026 00:03People tell BBC Your Voice the rising cost of private dentistry is putting them in a difficult position.
  • Meningitis B vaccine to be offered to a million young people 12 Jun 2026 00:02The decision for the one-off vaccine programme follows the unprecedented outbreak in Kent this year.
  • Weight-loss drug Wegovy to be available in pill form in UK for first time11 Jun 2026 16:00Manufacturer Novo Nordisk says a daily tablet of the drug could be more convenient for some people than weekly injections.
Home > Sick Day Rules

Sick Day Rules

Medicine sick day guidance

Taking certain medicines when you are dehydrated or very unwell can result in you developing a more serious illness. This is because they can increase the risk of dehydration and lead to potentially serious side effects. This is known as Medicine Sick Day Rules. These medicines should be temporarily stopped if you are at risk of becoming dehydrated with any of the following:

  • Vomiting or diarrhoea (unless only minor)
  • Fevers, sweats or shaking

You can restart the medication after 24 to 48 hours of eating and drinking normally. Do not take extra for missed doses.

Which medications should I stop?

  • ACE inhibitors: names ending in ‘pril’ - examples: lisinopril, perindopril, ramipril. A medicine for high blood pressure and heart conditions. If you are dehydrated, these medicines can stop your kidneys working properly.
  • ARBs: names ending in ‘sartan’ - examples: losartan, candesartan, valsartan. A medicine for high blood pressure and heart conditions. If you are dehydrated, these medicines can stop your kidneys working properly.
  • Diuretics: sometimes called ‘water pills’ - examples: furosemide, bendroflumethiazide, indapamide, spironolactone. Used for excess fluid and high blood pressure. These medicines can make dehydration more likely.
  • NSAIDs: anti-inflammatory pain killers - examples: ibuprofen, naproxen, diclofenac. If you are dehydrated, these medicines can stop your kidneys working properly.
  • Metformin: a medicine for diabetes. Dehydration can make it more likely that you will develop a serious side effect called lactic acidosis.
  • SGLT2 inhibitors: names ending in ‘flozin’ - examples: canagliflozin, dapagliflozin, empagliflozin, ertugliflozin. A medication used in the treatment of Diabetes, Kidney disease or Heart Failure. These medicines can make dehydration more likely and if you have diabetes can cause acid to build up if you are unwell.

More information relating to SGLT2 inhibitors

Which illnesses cause dehydration?

Dehydration is the loss of fluid from your body. Vomiting, diarrhoea, and fever (high temperature, sweats, shaking) can make you dehydrated. If you are sick once or have diarrhoea once, then you are unlikely to become dehydrated. Having two or more episodes of vomiting or diarrhoea can lead to dehydration: in these cases, you should consider following this advice.

What actions should I take?

If you develop a dehydrating illness, you should temporarily stop taking any medicine listed here, and any other medicine identified by your health professional. It is very important that you restart your medicine once you have recovered from the illness. This would normally be after 24 to 48 hours of eating and drinking normally. When you restart your medicine, just take them as normal. Do not take extra for the doses you have missed.

Where can I find more information?

  • Diabetes when you are unwell
  • Acute Kidney Injury

Last Updated 8 Dec 2025

Share

  • Print
  • Facebook
  • Bluesky
  • X (Twitter)
  • LinkedIn
  • Mastodon

Site

  • Sign In
  • Sitemap
  • Back To Top

About

  • Disclaimer
  • Website Privacy
  • Website Accessibility
  • Cookies
  • Content Attribution

Social

  • Facebook

Contact

Plumstead (Main Branch)

Plumstead (Main Branch), 44 Conway Road, Plumstead, London, SE18 1AH

  • 020 8854 2042

Welling (Branch Site) - Temporarily Closed Until Further Notice

142-146 Bellegrove Road, Welling, Kent, DA16 3QR

  • 020 8854 2042
© Neighbourhood Direct Ltd  2026
GP Practice Website by Oldroyd Publishing Group

Loading...