This is a cautionary tale about prescription charges in England. My daughter’s fiancé has been type 1 diabetic since the age of 9, he’s now 26.
As a child til he was 18 and in full time education no prescription fees were charged.
He then moved to Cardiff for four years for Uni, so as in Wales you get prescriptions free, he continued not having to pay.
After Uni he moved to London and didn’t pay for prescriptions believing having diabetes made him exempt.
This week he received a £100 fine for non payment of prescription fees! He has never in four years been asked for proof of exemption when picking up his meds from the pharmacy.
He has appealed and thankfully they have withdrawn the fine. Now he has to pay for prescriptions until he receives his exemption certificate (which is actually a card!) and keep receipts so all the fees can be refunded once the card is in his possession.
What a ridiculous system! Surely a prescription of insulin cartridges, pens, Dexcoms, blood and ketone testing strips etc… makes it obvious he has diabetes and shouldn’t have to pay, yet he has to get a form from his GP to confirm his diagnosis then send it away to get a card saying what is obvious!
As a child til he was 18 and in full time education no prescription fees were charged.
He then moved to Cardiff for four years for Uni, so as in Wales you get prescriptions free, he continued not having to pay.
After Uni he moved to London and didn’t pay for prescriptions believing having diabetes made him exempt.
This week he received a £100 fine for non payment of prescription fees! He has never in four years been asked for proof of exemption when picking up his meds from the pharmacy.
He has appealed and thankfully they have withdrawn the fine. Now he has to pay for prescriptions until he receives his exemption certificate (which is actually a card!) and keep receipts so all the fees can be refunded once the card is in his possession.
What a ridiculous system! Surely a prescription of insulin cartridges, pens, Dexcoms, blood and ketone testing strips etc… makes it obvious he has diabetes and shouldn’t have to pay, yet he has to get a form from his GP to confirm his diagnosis then send it away to get a card saying what is obvious!
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