Evorel Conti

Compare licensed online pharmacies for Evorel Conti. Complete a consultation with an EU-registered doctor for a secure, legal digital prescription.

Want to buy Evorel Conti without a prescription?

You can order Evorel Conti here. Fill in a short form. A UK doctor checks if it is right for you.

If yes, it ships fast in a plain box.

How to order Evorel Conti

  1. Find the drug you need on our site.
  2. Pick a clinic. See the price.
  3. Fill in a short health form.
  4. A doctor reads your form.
  5. If it is safe for you, they say yes.
  6. Your order ships fast to your door.
  7. It comes in a plain, sealed box.

Why use us? We compare UK clinics. We show you the price and how fast they ship. We do not sell drugs. We just help you find the best one for you.

Is it safe? Yes. All our clinics are UK-based. A real doctor reads each form. They will not sell to you if it is not safe for you.

Evorel Conti on Prescriptsy

Evorel Conti is described on Prescriptsy as independent product information.

Here you can understand how online consultation works, what medical checks partner clinics carry out, and which factors matter when comparing providers.

We do not sell medicines directly, but help users compare licensed healthcare partners on price, delivery speed, service quality, and overall trustworthiness.

What is Evorel Conti?

Evorel Conti is a continuous combined Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) patch designed for postmenopausal women.

In my practice, I frequently recommend patches over tablets for women who prefer a 'fit and forget' approach or those who have a higher risk of blood clots, as transdermal absorption allows the hormones to bypass the liver.

Active Ingredient

The patches contain two active hormones: estradiol hemihydrate (an oestrogen) and norethisterone acetate (a progestogen). Each patch delivers 50 mcg of estradiol and 170 mcg of norethisterone per 24 hours.

Indications

I typically prescribe these patches for:

  • Relief of symptoms occurring after menopause (such as hot flushes, night sweats, and vaginal dryness)
  • Prevention of osteoporosis in postmenopausal women at high risk of future fractures

It is specifically indicated for women who still have their womb (uterus) and whose last natural period was more than 12 months ago.

How to obtain Evorel Conti legally online?

Many of my patients ask if they can skip the waiting room to get their HRT.

You can safely request this medication through an online doctor service connected to a certified online pharmacy. Here is how the process ensures your safety:

  1. Step 1: Choose your medication - Select the appropriate patch quantity (available in packs of 8, 16, or 24 patches).
  2. Step 2: Complete the medical questionnaire - You will answer detailed questions about your menopause symptoms, medical history, and blood pressure.
  3. Step 3: Doctor review - An EU-registered doctor will review your answers to ensure continuous HRT is safe for you.
  4. Step 4: Delivery - Once approved, a digital prescription is sent to a partner pharmacy, which dispenses and ships your patches discreetly.

Always ensure you have had a recent blood pressure check before starting or renewing HRT through a medicine service online.

Dosage and Usage

Proper application is crucial for HRT patches to work effectively. The standard dosage is one patch applied to the skin twice a week. You should change the patch on the same two days each week (for example, Mondays and Thursdays).

  • Evorel Conti 50 mcg - 8 patches (1 month supply)
  • Evorel Conti 50 mcg - 16 patches (2 month supply)
  • Evorel Conti 50 mcg - 24 patches (3 month supply)

In my clinical experience, the most common mistake patients make is applying the patch to the same spot repeatedly, which causes skin irritation.

Always apply it to a clean, dry, unbroken area of skin below the waist (usually the thigh or bottom), and never apply it on or near the breasts.

Side Effects

Common side effects

Because this is a continuous combined therapy, you shouldn't experience a monthly bleed, but irregular spotting is quite common in the first few months.

  • Skin irritation or redness where the patch is applied
  • Breast tenderness or pain
  • Headaches
  • Irregular vaginal bleeding or spotting (usually settles after 3-6 months)

Rare side effects

  • Mood swings or depression
  • Fluid retention (bloating)
  • Migraines

When to contact a doctor?

You must remove the patch and seek immediate medical attention if you notice signs of a blood clot (painful swelling in your leg, sudden chest pain, difficulty breathing), sudden severe headaches, or if you notice any changes in your breasts such as dimpling or lumps.

Important Warnings

Contraindications

HRT is not suitable for everyone. As a GP, I always carefully assess a patient's cardiovascular and oncological history before prescribing.

  • Current, past, or suspected breast cancer
  • Known or suspected oestrogen-dependent cancer (e.g., endometrial cancer)
  • Unexplained vaginal bleeding
  • Untreated excessive thickening of the womb lining (endometrial hyperplasia)
  • Previous or current blood clots in a vein (DVT or pulmonary embolism)
  • Liver disease where liver function tests have not returned to normal

Drug Interactions

Certain medications can interfere with how these patches work, potentially causing irregular bleeding.

Inform your prescribing doctor if you are taking medications for epilepsy (such as phenobarbital , phenytoin , or carbamazepine ), tuberculosis medicines (like rifampicin ), or herbal remedies containing St John's Wort .

Medical information

Evorel Conti is a continuous combined Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) patch designed for postmenopausal women.

In my practice, I frequently recommend patches over tablets for women who prefer a 'fit and forget' approach or those who have a higher risk of blood clots, as transdermal absorption allows the hormones to bypass the liver.

Active Ingredient

The patches contain two active hormones: estradiol hemihydrate (an oestrogen) and norethisterone acetate (a progestogen). Each patch delivers 50 mcg of estradiol and 170 mcg of norethisterone per 24 hours.

Indications

I typically prescribe these patches for:

  • Relief of symptoms occurring after menopause (such as hot flushes, night sweats, and vaginal dryness)
  • Prevention of osteoporosis in postmenopausal women at high risk of future fractures

It is specifically indicated for women who still have their womb (uterus) and whose last natural period was more than 12 months ago.

Dosage guidance

Proper application is crucial for HRT patches to work effectively. The standard dosage is one patch applied to the skin twice a week. You should change the patch on the same two days each week (for example, Mondays and Thursdays).

  • Evorel Conti 50 mcg - 8 patches (1 month supply)
  • Evorel Conti 50 mcg - 16 patches (2 month supply)
  • Evorel Conti 50 mcg - 24 patches (3 month supply)

In my clinical experience, the most common mistake patients make is applying the patch to the same spot repeatedly, which causes skin irritation.

Always apply it to a clean, dry, unbroken area of skin below the waist (usually the thigh or bottom), and never apply it on or near the breasts.

Side effects and warnings

Common side effects

Because this is a continuous combined therapy, you shouldn't experience a monthly bleed, but irregular spotting is quite common in the first few months.

  • Skin irritation or redness where the patch is applied
  • Breast tenderness or pain
  • Headaches
  • Irregular vaginal bleeding or spotting (usually settles after 3-6 months)

Rare side effects

  • Mood swings or depression
  • Fluid retention (bloating)
  • Migraines

When to contact a doctor?

You must remove the patch and seek immediate medical attention if you notice signs of a blood clot (painful swelling in your leg, sudden chest pain, difficulty breathing), sudden severe headaches, or if you notice any changes in your breasts such as dimpling or lumps.

Contraindications

HRT is not suitable for everyone. As a GP, I always carefully assess a patient's cardiovascular and oncological history before prescribing.

  • Current, past, or suspected breast cancer
  • Known or suspected oestrogen-dependent cancer (e.g., endometrial cancer)
  • Unexplained vaginal bleeding
  • Untreated excessive thickening of the womb lining (endometrial hyperplasia)
  • Previous or current blood clots in a vein (DVT or pulmonary embolism)
  • Liver disease where liver function tests have not returned to normal

Drug Interactions

Certain medications can interfere with how these patches work, potentially causing irregular bleeding.

Inform your prescribing doctor if you are taking medications for epilepsy (such as phenobarbital , phenytoin , or carbamazepine ), tuberculosis medicines (like rifampicin ), or herbal remedies containing St John's Wort .

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