Yes, they are. Given they are cheaper than Aviva, Contour, Contour NEXT, all of the Abbott strips, most of the Glucomen strips and the Onetouch brands, it should be fairly easy.Thanks for the useful report, Tim. Are Dario strips available on prescription and do you know if it's difficult for GPs to agree to prescribe them given the cost?
@Neemo, that data is pulled directly from this page and graphed: http://www.drugtariff.nhsbsa.nhs.uk/#/00241786-FA/FA00241579/Part IXR - Chemical Reagents
Which documents the change in costs on a month by month basis. Based on that, you either have strips for a bolus calculating system, (Aviva, Freestyle Lite or Optium and Dario) or you end up with Codefree, unless you are using a pump that requires something different.
I am happy to argue for a bolus calculating system strips as that in the long run helps my control. They struggle to argue that point.
probably comes out of capex/opex type budget decisions.So what you are basically saying @AndBreathe is that because the others supply free meters, they will prescribe those in spite of the strips costing way more, and the fact that saving from the first prescription of the strips from codefree more than covers the outlay for the meter? That's bonkers and a half.
Sadly not. While they are clearly made in the same facility they are a mirror image to the Dario ones meaning they simply don't work. So Dario get to charge £15 for 50 while Codefree charge £6.99. Thought I'd posted that up somewhere! Oh well...Billion dollar question???? Do the code free strips fit this meter so that a bg reading be obtained or not?????????
Over to you @tim2000s
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