Emma Hadenham was stunned when she realised Unicare Pharmacy in Rowner Road, Gosport, had given her a drug which could have led to an unwanted pregnancy and might also have had dangerous side effects.
The 22-year-old at first thought the pills, wh
ich should have been Marvelon, had simply been repackaged and she took the first night's tablet as usual.
However, nagged by doubts she checked again the following day and realised it was actually something called Marevan, a brand name for the blood-thinning drug warfarin.
But when she took the pills back to the chemist, she claims the staff at first said they did not know what they had given her.
Miss Hadenham, of Melville Road, Gosport, said: 'I'm quite angry – the blood-thinning pills weren't such a risk for me, but if it had been someone who had a heart problem, or some other health condition, it could have been fatal.
'For me it was more about missing out on the contraception. I don't want kids yet, I'm not ready for them. Everyone makes mistakes but in this industry they can't afford to be making ones like this.'
And when she asked staff at Unicare for a morning-after pill to cover the night before, they tried to charge her.
Miss Hadenham added: 'I couldn't believe it – they were asking me to pay for what was their mistake. And they were quite desperate to get the box back but I kept hold of it.'
Zaffer Mukhtar, the owner of Unicare Pharmacy, admitted a mistake had been made.
He said: 'I have apologised to Miss Hadenham. It was a mistake which should not have happened and I'm very sorry, but mistakes do happen.
'Luckily in this case no harm has been done.'
The full article contains 333 words and appears in The News newspaper.