Genital thrush
Confidential treatment for the symptoms of genital thrush including capsules, vaginal preparations, and thrush cream available to buy online from Dr Fox.
Read medical information and answer medical questions to buy treatment online.
Genital thrush medication
PricesAll medication supplied is UK licensed.
Prices
- prices
- Prescription
- Delivery
Thrush treatment | Quantity | Cost |
---|---|---|
Canesten thrush cream (clotrimazole) | 20g tube 2% cream | £6.40 |
Canesten combi pack (clotrimazole) 1 treatment | One dual pack (500mg pessary plus 10g 2% cream) | £13.50 |
Canesten combi cream (clotrimazole) 1 treatment | One dual pack (5g vaginal cream plus 10g 2% cream) | £14.50 |
Canesten Thrush Duo | 150mg fluconazole oral capsule + 10g 2% clotrimazole cream | £14.80 |
Fluconazole 150mg capsule | One single dose pack | £4.90 |
Fluconazole 150mg capsule | Two single dose packs | £8.90 |
Price match guarantee
Prescription issued online - small prescription fee per order.
Prescription fees
Dr Fox supplies medicine on prescription and charges a small prescription fee based on the order value of each prescription.
Prescriptions are issued by our doctors online and sent electronically to our pharmacy.
Order value | Prescription fee |
---|---|
up to £10 | £1.00 |
up to £20 | £2.00 |
up to £40 | £3.00 |
over £40 | £4.00 |
If you have your own private or NHS paper prescription please post to our pharmacy (details).
Dr Fox prices are 25%–50% lower than other UK online clinics.
Delivery charges
UK delivery only: £2.90 per consultation via Royal Mail Tracked 24 Signed For (1-2 working days with tracking).
Parcel forwarding services are not permitted. Use only UK home or work delivery address.
Returns and refunds - unwanted items can be returned within 14 working days for a full refund.
Medical information
Written and reviewed by a team of doctors. Dr Fox is regulated by the CQC & GPhC.
Genital thrush is caused by a yeast infection, usually the yeast called candida albicans.
Symptoms of thrush in women can include soreness and irritation in and around the vagina, with redness and inflammation of the skin and, in more severe cases, swelling of the entrance to the vagina.
The inflammation of thrush can cause burning when passing urine (dysuria). Active thrush can also produce a discharge, usually described as cheese-like, although it can be creamy or mucous-like. In very severe cases the skin can crack and ulcerate.
In men thrush can cause red spots or a rash on the head of the penis.
Why some people get thrush
Most women and men who get thrush symptoms are entirely healthy. The yeast causing thrush is naturally occurring and is often present in the vagina and in other places on the body. It normally does not cause symptoms.
The reason thrush becomes active and produces symptoms from time to time in some people is not well understood. Symptomatic thrush is more common with diabetes, in pregnancy, when antibiotics are being taken, and when there is a generalised illness reducing the body's immunity. In most cases thrush just flares up for no known reason.
Treatment for thrush
Dr Fox provides the most widely used types of capsules and creams to treat thrush. The capsule contains the antifungal medication fluconazole and is a single dose treatment. The creams and pessary contain an antifungal called clotrimazole.
For women
Thrush in women is usually treated with pessaries or cream inserted in the vagina and creams applied to the skin around the entrance to the vagina. The pessary or vaginal cream can be either a single one-off dose or daily dose for 3-6 days. The external cream is usually applied 2-3 times daily for a week.
Alternatively there is a single-dose antifungal capsule Diflucan (fluconazole 150mg) to treat thrush. This antifungal medication eliminates thrush from the body, including thrush in the vagina. This capsule treatment may be more effective, in some cases, than pessaries and creams. A capsule is less messy to use. It is possible to use both capsules and creams and pessaries at the same time.
For men
Thrush in men is usually treated by applying a cream to the head of the penis 2-3 times daily for 10-14 days. Thrush in men can also be treated by taking the same single-dose antifungal capsule (fluconazole 150mg) as is used to treat thrush in women.
Further information about thrush and its treatment see NHS - Thrush in men and women.
Response to treatment
Symptoms of thrush usually settle completely within 7-14 days of starting treatment. Women prone to repeated episodes of thrush often need to repeat treatment every few weeks or months.
If thrush symptoms have not improved within 7 days medical advice should be sought.
Recurring thrush (more than 4 episodes in 12 months) can be treated with longer courses and this can be discussed with your usual GP. If you are experiencing more than 2 infections in 6 months then it is advised to consult with your doctor.
Do partners need treatment for thrush?
Thrush is not a sexually transmitted disease in the sense that the yeast that causes the infection is present naturally and can flare up without any sexual contact. However infection can be passed backwards and forwards between partners during sexual intercourse or through touching or the use of sex toys. Therefore there may be a benefit in treating partners simultaneously, even if they have no thrush symptoms, to reduce recurrence.
Side effects
Creams and pessaries may cause skin irritation.
Very little of the active ingredients of creams and pessaries are absorbed into the body.
The more common side effects for the antifungal capsule (fluconazole 150mg single-dose) include headache, nausea, abdominal pain, diarrhoea, and flatulence. Other adverse events such as a rash are encountered rarely. For other rare side effects see the manufacturer's patient information leaflets included with medicine packs.
Cautions
- If a diagnosis of thrush has not been made previously it is best to consult with your regular doctor to confirm the diagnosis.
- Symptoms not improving within 7 days require investigation.
- Pregnant women should not take fluconazole capsules or use vaginal preparations without consulting their own GP or midwife.
- There is a very rare theoretical risk of abnormal heart rhythm if fluconazole is taken at the same time as some other medications - please check this list.
- Thrush treatments do not deal with sexually transmitted disease. If sexually transmitted disease is suspected, investigations are needed by a GP or Sexual Health Clinic.
Local Sexual Health Clinics
Buy treatmentDr Fox supplies thrush treatment on prescription – you are required to answer a short medical questionnaire before your order can be completed.
Patient leaflets
- Fluconazole 150mg Capsule
- Canesten Thrush Duo
- Canesten Cream
- Canesten Combi Pessary & Cream
- Canesten Combi Creams
This page written and reviewed by doctors
Authored 18 February 2010 by Dr Tony Steele
MB ChB Sheffield University 1983. Former hospital doctor and GP. GMC no. 2825328
Reviewed by Dr A. Wood, Dr B. Babor
Last reviewed 09 November 2023
Last updated 19 January 2024
Editorial policy
References
- BASHH, 2019, National guideline for the management of vulvovaginal candidiasis, accessed 09 November 2023
- NICE, 2022, Candida - female genital, accessed 09 November 2023
- Ranbaxy, 2021, Fluconazole 150 mg Capsules: Summary of Product Characteristics, accessed 09 November 2023
- Bayer, 2022, Canesten Cream: Summary of Product Characteristics, accessed 09 November 2023
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