Morganator
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another12 said:I guess I am fortunate as my doc gives me 2X50 contour test strips monthly. The only problem iv got is I have now got 10 sealed/unused tubs of them. Anyone got any advise what too do with surplus?
mark5745 said:That's part of the problem people getting the scripts from doctors then not using what they get that's just wasting tax payers money
Sent from the
As a taxpayer - on my State Pension! - I too believe in not wasting taxpayers' money. Rest assured, Mark, that as soon as I am confident about the state of play re our Practice funding I will be using up my strips. I have already reduced my original 50 strips a month repeat prescription to 50 strips every two months because I have very good control, but I do still need to do a full day's testing at intervals to maintain that control.
I certainly can't afford - on that same State Pension - to buy the test strips that I need. And why should I? I have worked and paid my National Insurance for 43 years, from the age of 17, and I don't cost the NHS much, overall. I certainly wouldn't dream of wasting precious resources. If I have any full boxes of strips left when I die I'll get my executrix to advertise them on here, rather than give them back to the practice to be incinerated. :wink:
Viv 8)
another12 said:I guess I am fortunate as my doc gives me 2X50 contour test strips monthly. The only problem iv got is I have now got 10 sealed/unused tubs of them. Anyone got any advise what too do with surplus?
£15.11 per 50 = £151.10KatharineShaw said:The NHS spends an awful lot of money on test strips. The value of 10 x 50 Contour test strips is over £100,
They Don't re-use, They just Bin em!But agree on getting a smaller prescriptionKatharineShaw said:so the strips should be returned to the pharmacy for re-using and you need to advise your GP you don't need as many as you are prescribed.
Dunno!KatharineShaw said:How many more people out there are hoarding test strips?
Granted that selling NHS products is illegal, but strips CAN be bought legally AND at a price well below the rrp!(Often from the manufacturers)KatharineShaw said:My diabetes has never been well controlled and I have learnt today that I am now suffering from background retinopathy. With my previous GP, I was prescribed Life scan one touch test strips which fitted a variety of different meters that I had bought or been supplied with, so I had different meters in different places, one in the car, one at work, one at home and usually one in my handbag. This worked well for me and because the software for downloading accepted readings from al the meters I could be fairly sure of getting a comprehensive picture of my results. My GP wasn't particularly interested as I couldn't record insulin intake or carbohydrate so the records were really just for me.
When I moved and joined a new practice, I was given the meter of choice, which again only recorded BG results, and I wasn't given the data cable or software to download the readings, nor was I ever asked to download these at the surgery.
I have now been sent a free Contour next USB meter, which allows me to record BG results, Insulin intake and carbohydrate intake, so with that and the Carbs and Cals app on my iphone, I am now getting some useful data. Despite this, the local PCT does not support the provision of the test strips for this meter, so I am buying my own at a cost of rrp £27, or buying from ebay at a lesser cost. Incidentally it is a criminal offence to sell NHS products privately, so all those people I have bought from are breaking the law.
I can commiserate with you over your frustration. The attitude of of a lot of HCPs IMHO is a throwback to the old way of treating docs as gods and treating their utterances as divine scripture! I too have found that most docs have neither the time or inclination to understand the technology of modern blood testing devices/software :roll:KatharineShaw said:So.....where does this leave me. Frustrated that the NHS will not give me the means to monitor my diabetes with a meter that works for me, cross that the 'one size fits all' mentality treats me like an idiot who can't assess the value of the technology for myself and make a reasoned choice about what would suit me best, despite many years evidence that my diabetes need vigilant monitoring in order to reach the proscribed HbA1C levels, cholesterol and blood pressure readings required by the NHS and rigidly enforced by my GP, puzzled that the ability to download readings is not used more widely by the clinicians who are treating my diabetes, and generally feeling that the NHS has not helped me very much at all.
Any comments?
lexilox said:Only once, it was a good while ago, they got a strongly worded letter from me about the cost of complications to the NHS if I couldn't test enough to keep good control and that put an end to it. No problems since. I use an average of 220 strips a month. From what others have said on the forums I'm one of a lucky few.
i am type 2 not on any medicatoin for diabetes this month i have been denighed test strips my gp would like to give me them but is over ruled by the other gp's in the practise.
Yes. My local Cloisters medical practice discontinued all Type 2 test-strips some time ago. .
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