Mine is the same, they used to say I am using much more than another diabetic they have at there surgery....Just a rant to make me feel better. I’m in the uk and I’m a t1 and I order all my repeat prescriptions online, collect them from boots. Nice and easy. I get 5 sticks of novorapid at time which lasts me about a month.
Except.. every now and then my GP/doctors surgery cancel and decline my repeat for insulin because:
A) they want to speak to me about something and by cancelling my insulin they know this ‘gets my attention’ so I contact them
Or
B) they’ve randomly decided that I’ve had enough insulin this month so I don’t need anymore for a while. (Even though it’s prescribed as ‘when required’)
This gets me sooo mad. It’s hard enough being completely at the mercy of a gp and pharmacy every month but when they cancel because they want to speak to me or I have a review coming up so decide I can’t have any insulin until I have a review - this just ridiculous!
Insulin isn’t something to ‘cancel’ for a t1 diabetic living from month to month at their prescription mercy. GPs should know better.
Anyone else a T1 and get messed around with your insulin repeats or is it just me??!
Grrrr.
Ok rant over. Better check if I’m high.
Hi thanks for the responses. This time around it’s because I was due to schedule my annual review and I hadn’t responded to their letter within 1 week. So they refused to allow any repeats to go through online until I phoned them for an appointment.
It feels like they occasionally withhold insulin as a technique to ensure I phone them.
Other times are just a mystery until I phone and complain and reorder.
It happens about once every 3 months or so.
P.
Perhaps you could use it more sparinglyOur GP removed mine and my daughter's insulin from our scripts completely. According to the receptionist it's due to the nhs saving money... What by killing their patients off? Haha. I went straight to the surgery and refused to move until it was sorted. They threatened to call the police. I told them they can call the queen herself for all i care. It was sorted after about 10 minutes
Our GP removed mine and my daughter's insulin from our scripts completely. According to the receptionist it's due to the nhs saving money... What by killing their patients off? Haha. I went straight to the surgery and refused to move until it was sorted. They threatened to call the police. I told them they can call the queen herself for all i care. It was sorted after about 10 minutes
Perhaps you could use it more sparingly.
Perhaps I could "sparingly"squirt it in their eyes. They make me so mad! The best one was when the pharmacist asked me WHY I need insulin. I'm not sure she expected me to tell her it was obviously for my piles
My understanding is that surgeries are required to conduct medication reviews, and have penalties if they do not do so. I think they are also prevented from continuing the prescription if a review to too overdue.
Reviews are also necessary to check that the prescription is still appropriate, and not wasting NHS resources.
I know on the face of it, a T1 is always going to need insulin, but there is so much more to take into account. A medication review allows the surgery to see that how the patient is doing, and allows an assessment of the whole situation. It is an opportunity for the patient to make requests for changes, discuss issues (such as whether all those lancets are really necessary), and is a way for the surgery to 'prove' that they haven't just let a patient disappear for years with a potentially lethal medication with no monitoring at all. Remember, they are not always informed of every decision made by a consultant or clinic.
Reviews are built into the NICE guidelines
https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/qs120/chapter/quality-statement-6-structured-medication-review
https://www.sps.nhs.uk/wp-content/u...CCG-Medication-Review-Practice-Guide-2014.pdf
https://ebpcooh.org.uk/get-your-medicines-reviewed/
In my opinion as a long term T1 that's a load of rubbish as we're entitled to our meds as and when needed. Very poor advice from a mod
My advice would be to go to the surgery and demand the prescription for the meds you need and don't move till you get it, but then I go all militant when having to deal with systems.
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