SarahCarrick
Member
- Messages
- 16
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
How did you manage 300? My quota is 100 !!http://www.diabetes.org.uk/Documents/Advocacy/test-strips-advocacy-pack-0613.pdf
and i get 300 test strips per month , and plenty of short acting and long acting insulin in cartridges.
I totally agree with your sentiments. I'm a newly diagnosed T1 and need to find out what foods affect by bg levels, so am therefore testing quite frequently. I have an appt with my gp DSN on Monday and hope to persuade her to increase my script for strips from 100 to 150 per month. Keeping my fingers crossed.I had this problem when i was first diagnosed, went through the honeymoon period and was testing alot, practically had to beg the doctors for more testing strips over the phone explaining why i needed more, they eventually agreed to change the prescription to allow me to have more, and low and behold when i went to collect, it was still the original prescription with not enough strips. This went on for a good 8 months, each time collecting the prescription there not being enough strips. The doctors blames the pharmacy the pharmacy blames the doctors. It all comes down to the government cuts and the GP's being tight with prescriptions. Its disgusting really, I have to beg for something that keeps me alive, while some **** gets a free boob job cause there feeling down.
I used to be a Dr's receptionist and did my best to dispel the rumour that we were all dragons. I worked in a small two man practice and got to know the patients very well. Some patients were p**s takers, but the majority were genuine.You're right about the receptionists at the GP's too, they speak to you like ****, and have some sort of delusion that there more than just a receptionist, most of the stuff you say to them doesnt even get passed on
Thanks you guys. I had no idea I was being under prescribed.Talk to your dsn on monday and explain what is happening. Get her to ask the endocrinologist to write.
for any one taking insulin --- before each meal and 2 hours post meal and 1 test at bedtime are a minimum ( total 7 )
add to this the dvla requirement of testing before driving , hypos, sickness and clearly requirements will be 200-250 for sure.
@SarahCarrick - i am assuming you are on MDI-- write your daily doses in a log and present them to the gp as proof of how much you are taking.
also -- ask the gp if he would drive his car without a speedometer.
@June_C == the quantities above apply to you as well -- 150 is not enough to test as often as you need to.
i will find you a link for things you can do if your gp is being unreasonable but your first port of call is to get your endocrinologist to write to him detailing your needs..
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