Alternaleaf
Alternaleaf is a UK online medical cannabis clinic that connects patients with specialist doctors who prescribe cannabis based medicines for long term and treatment resistant conditions. Care is delivered remotely through secure teleconsultations, with prescriptions dispensed by partner pharmacies and shipped to the patient’s home across the UK.
Clinical approach
The clinic focuses on conditions where standard treatments have not worked well enough. Medical cannabis is prescribed in personalised treatment plans that can include oils, flower for vaporisation and other regulated formats. Dosing is titrated individually, and treatment is reviewed on a regular basis to balance symptom relief with side effect control. Education pages describe how cannabinoids are used for chronic pain, neurological conditions, mental health, women’s health and gastrointestinal conditions, and how side effects and interactions are managed.
Care pathway
Patients start with an online eligibility check, then book a video consultation with a doctor on the clinic platform. If medical cannabis is clinically appropriate and legally eligible, the doctor issues a private prescription which is processed by a UK registered pharmacy. Medication is delivered to the patient, and follow up consultations and dose adjustments are arranged through the same online system.
Costs and access
Alternaleaf charges service fees for consultations and ongoing care in addition to the cost of medication. Educational content explains that UK patients pay for initial and follow up specialist appointments plus prescriptions, with options such as monthly memberships or pay as you go pricing to spread costs. Product prices vary by strain, format and dose, with examples given for typical per gram costs of flower.
Regulatory context
Alternaleaf operates within the UK private medical cannabis framework. Its content explains that medical cannabis has been legal in the UK since 2018, that only doctors on the General Medical Council specialist register can prescribe it, and that products are regulated by authorities such as the MHRA and controlled under Home Office and Department of Health and Social Care rules. Prescriptions are filled by registered UK pharmacies and patients are advised about legal issues such as driving and controlled drug status.