Not necessarily, it depends whether you are prescribed diabetic medications or not,Hi,
If you are diagnosed as type 2 diabetic do you get free prescriptions?
Hi,
If you are diagnosed as type 2 diabetic do you get free prescriptions?
Thanks that's interesting. So if you are doing diet only you have to pay for the prescriptions and tabs unless you say you'll take the medication for the free prescriptions..
I believe the reason for the free prescriptions for diabetes and other long term conditions is to ensure you can afford the medication for your condition. It is not a perk of diabetes.Thanks that's interesting. So if you are doing diet only you have to pay for the prescriptions and tabs unless you say you'll take the medication for the free prescriptions..
I believe the reason for the free prescriptions for diabetes and other long term conditions is to ensure you can afford the medication for your condition. It is not a perk of diabetes.
I suspect (although can't confirm) the reason the exception covers all prescriptions is to save the administrative costs over working out which medication should be covered.
Despite these free prescriptions for me (with type 1 treated by insulin), I still pay from general over the counter medication and would refuse a prescription for something like paracetamol (which I was offered recently after surgery) as I see no reason to burden the NHS unnecessarily.
I guess you are talking about the test strips.I was just thinking those that are diet only would have been able to get free prescriptions just for the tabs to help them be able to monitor themselves therefore not needing to go back to the doctor so much for check ups unnecessarily and to stop other complications. If they can help people have the right tools to keep well and manage their own levels that must in the end save the NHS money.