Very simple - you set yourself up as a Medical Supplies Retailer, get yourself some headed notepaper, business bank account, etc, and you can buy medical supplies from any of the wholesalers and sell them via Ebay. The retailer's profit margin on most items is a minimum of 50% and on many lines 100%. Also you don't need to carry stock in-hand. You can just order it from the retailer when someone orders it from you. With no overheads of staff or premises or stock, you can see why more businesses are using Ebay as their retail "shop outlet".gefmayhem said:Where do the folk on Ebay get them from?
One seller of OneTouch ultra is starting bidding at £23 for two packs and looking for £25 for Buy it now.
Nice idea, but unfortunately this is only likely to work if you are on insulin. For people on insulin testing is necessary for safety. For T2s not on insulin, testing is for monitoring the condition and for learning how best to control the condition. This is essential for long term health, but much less likely to cause short term problems. If I did this to my GP he would say "Good, I have been telling you not to test!".DiabeticSkater said:I had this problem a few years ago. So I took all my insulin, test strips and testers to the docs placed em all on his desk and told the idiot I have had enough and dont want anymore treatment.
Again, this is likely to work for people on insulin, but for non-insulin using T2s the NICE guidelines are really ambiguous. I can't remember the exact wording but the gist is that testing isn't essential and it should only be made available as part of an integrated education and management strategy. No where does it say that GPs should be encouraging testing, it implies that they shouldn't.SarahQ said:I would print out the NICE guidelines for your GP if I were you. I would also report him to the GMC if he threatening you with being removed from the list due to your test strip use. I would also put it in writing to your GP how he makes you feel each time you ask for test strips(guilt trip)
It's a bit hit and miss, but the going rate on eBay for most major brands seems to be very roughly half the high street price.timo2 said:If you're going to have to fund some or all of your test strips yourself, then it's worth
investing in a freestyle mini test meter. There's a regular seller on ebay doing 50 strips for
£12.50 (which includes postage costs). This is by far the cheapest strips I've come across
for any of the meters currently on the market.
I suspect that some people are doing exactly that. One hears stories that some doctors are willing to prescribe pretty much unlimited quantities, and some of the strips that turn up on e-Bay seem to have patients names peeled off the box. Ho hum... no one said that it was a sane system.gefmayhem said:So far I've had no problems getting them, maybe I should order extra from my doctors and sell them myself
Oh I agree - the problem is very much more serious for the OP than it is for me (I am a non-pregnant and indeed male T2!), and in any case I can afford to pay for my own strips. It is the principle of the thing that infuriates me. If one believes in a welfare state, and some of us still do, then it is an important principle that healthcare should be freely available to all. It is a sorry state when one is reduced to depending upon e-Bay for such things.SarahQ said:Ah but in this case the op is a type 1 diabetic and expecting a baby. Hence why I posted the comments. :wink:
Dennis said:Very simple - you set yourself up as a Medical Supplies Retailer, get yourself some headed notepaper, business bank account, etc, and you can buy medical supplies from any of the wholesalers and sell them via Ebay. The retailer's profit margin on most items is a minimum of 50% and on many lines 100%. Also you don't need to carry stock in-hand. You can just order it from the retailer when someone orders it from you. With no overheads of staff or premises or stock, you can see why more businesses are using Ebay as their retail "shop outlet".gefmayhem said:Where do the folk on Ebay get them from?
One seller of OneTouch ultra is starting bidding at £23 for two packs and looking for £25 for Buy it now.
Brillo said:I realise GPs try to save money by not giving test strips freely to diabetics, but just how common is this problem? I have always tested my bs requently (maybe too frequently), but I thought this was a good thing. In my youth I was always told off for not testing enough, whereas now I have a perfect Hba1c. My GP threatened to write me off his list because he found me too troublesome and demanding of sticks. Does anyone actually get the number of test strips they want? I am currently pregnant, so believe I have to check my bs at least 8 times a day from what I've read and been told by diabetic specialist nurse (I do about 10 a day, give or take), but my GP said I shouldn't test more than 4 times a day, pregnant or not, ideally just once or twice a day even.
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http://www.nice.org.uk/nicemedia/pdf/CG063Guidance.pdfWomen with diabetes should be advised to test fasting blood glucose levels and blood glucose levels 1 hour after every meal during pregnancy.
1.3.2.2
Women with insulin-treated diabetes should be advised to test blood glucose levels before going to bed at night during pregnancy.
1.3.2.3
Women with type 1 diabetes who are pregnant should be offered ketone testing strips and advised to test for ketonuria or ketonaemia if they become hyperglycaemic or unwell.
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