Ardbeg said:Been a bad boy for weeks now I'm afraid; two week all inclusive holiday in Mexico eating and drinking normally (well in excess TBH) and eating chocolate, etc.
noblehead said:Ardbeg said:Been a bad boy for weeks now I'm afraid; two week all inclusive holiday in Mexico eating and drinking normally (well in excess TBH) and eating chocolate, etc.
Naughty boy! :x ...............did you have a nice time! :wink:
Nigel
hanadr said:Hobs and co
The glucoflex R strips don't have the who;le range of readings. i prefer to be in the 4.5 - 5.5 range and I can't use them, because the give just one colour for this whole range.
Otherwise these are the cheapest strips around. they don't need a meter.
I buy my Freestyle Lite strips direct from Abbott Diabetes Care at 14.90 per pack including P&P by firstclass post with usually next day delivery.
My GP thinks that all strips will be stopped soon as the NHSs runs out of money.
Hana
Hobs said:Sue Morton said:So will I that is cheap - lets hope.
Yes Sue, that price of £9.65 for 50 strips is a retail price including VAT, so it would be a lot less to the NHS procurement list and leave all the others in the shade. If they were to offer them at say a NHS prescribed price of £8 for 50, the national bill for prescribed strips would be reduced by well over a third, as the average strip price as given in BNF is £14.50
anniep said:looks a good cheap sytem worth considering. One question I thought as diabetics we didn't have to pay VAT how does that work?
Hobs said:anniep said:looks a good cheap sytem worth considering. One question I thought as diabetics we didn't have to pay VAT how does that work?
If you suffer a chronic medical condition and need to buy something to aid treatment of your condition, then you can claim VAT exemption at the point of sale by signing a declaration form.
gbswales said:I would have thought that insulin dependent type 2's are in much greater need of testing than tablet control. For those of us on rapid insulin doses especially. I find that my levels peak and drop often for no apparent reason so I consider it essential to test before driving for example. This is best indicated by my daily routine of 2 weetabix for breakfast and nothing more until lunchtime. Even when starting from approximately the same morning reading my pre lunchtime level can vary by as much as 4-5 (this may be because I had pancreatitis a few years ago)
I tried for 3 years to control by diet and novamix and was running with HBA 1c at levels of 10 -14 - then I followed advice here on low carb dieting and with the help of my clinic moved to using nova rapid and regular readings - result is that my levels have been 7 or lower on the last four occasions which both my doctor and my clinic are very pleased with. This has only become possible through testing on a regular basis - at least once a day. If I dont see what the levels are doing then I lose control quickly - I realise that is like a will power issue but the fact is that I dont have the kind of routine mind that allows me to control by diet without warnings.
I also want to make sure that my diabetes has as little affect on my lifestyle as possible - I have never let my hemophilia dictate my lifestyle and I am not about to let diabetes do it! Make too many changes to the life that you enjoy and it means the illness/condition has beaten you!
I am fortunate in that my medical centre have continued to prescribe test strips but I am not complacent enough to think I am not at risk (they tried to cut them down a year ago and I fought to get them maintained on the basis that I didnt order them other than when I really needed them)
What the Health service should be doing is screwing the manufacturers to provide test strips at a reasonable price rather than them giving away meters left right and centre as they do on here.
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