Gaz-M
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 1,108
- Location
- Sunderland
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
- Dislikes
- baked beans
I know it sat at the Drs for a week before it was sent away, I,m going to call in the surgery after work tonight
No I don't want to open a can of worms so to speak as (for now) I have not been finedHave you contacted them to find out what is happening?
Hi Brian, please send details to Luke at Diabetes UK at the Addy in previous post. He will treat your information in full confidence and you will not get any abuse.^ Similar kinds of issues that I have put to NHSBSA .....but like yourself (or most other people in this situation) did not feel (and still do not feel) able to elaborate upon the details while my case is being considered (and for which I received an attack in this thread).
Well done.
I have just received a fine for £48.. They won't tell me what it's for.. I have received free diabetic prescriptions since I was 9 and when I left full time education I was never told and never sent a thing about the certificate.. No pharmacist has ever asked to see one or said that I needed one... It seems that a lot of us have been hit by this... Has anyone rang the diabetic advocates? I will be ringing them tomorrow.. I think it's quite disgusting that we haven't had a warning.. My prescription that I'm being fined for was back in November and I've just got a letter in March giving me 26 days to pay it!!Hi I have just received a letter saying i have to pay a £96 fine for not having a valid medical exemption certificate. I was diagnosed Type 1 in 1998 and have never paid for prescriptions since. Nobody has ever told me about this. Has anyone else had the same thing and if so what was the outcome?
No reports so far of any penalties much above a hundred odd quid so I would not worry about it being over thousand.I couldn't sleep last night for worrying I am going to get over £1000 of penalty notices landing on my mat
Thanks - my address on the prescription was updated as soon as I moved because we changed doctors as it was in a neighbouring county. I couldn't sleep last night for worrying I am going to get over £1000 of penalty notices landing on my mat
It's the prescription charge on the day they did the "random check", plus an extra charge of either 5 times the prescription charge, or £100, whichever is the lower.
So if there were 3 items on the prescription when they did the "random check", then the prescription charge is 3 x £8.05 = £24.15, plus an extra charge of 5 x £24.15 = £120.75, but this is reduced to £100, giving a total = £24.15 + £100 = £124.15
If it was only one item, then it will be £8.05 plus 5 x £8.05 = £48.30 total.
Very bizarre way of doing it, since it does not in any way relate to the actual "cost" of recovery of the money.
Typical QUANGO.