'NHS prescription charge to rise to £9.15'

Click reply below to discuss. If you haven’t already, join the forum to reply.
We'd like to remind Forumites to please avoid political debate on the Forum... Read More »
I don't have diabetes and don't know the answer to that, but I'd like to add that the other (IMHO) bizarre thing is that if you do suffer from a condition which entitles you to free prescriptions then ALL your prescriptions are free - not just those for medicines relating to that condition.uknick said:So, if there are any diabetes sufferers reading this, why do you get them for free?
PPCs can be backdated by up to one month. You must claim your refund within 3 months of paying.
The refund form (FP57) tells you what to do.
p00hsticks said:I don't have diabetes and don't know the answer to that, but I'd like to add that the other (IMHO) bizarre thing is that if you do suffer from a condition which entitles you to free prescriptions then ALL your prescriptions are free - not just those for medicines relating to that condition.uknick said:So, if there are any diabetes sufferers reading this, why do you get them for free?
Thanks for that. I'm going to assume when it was put together Diabetes Type 1 was the reason and Type 2 hardly existed. In the same way, asthma was not a common problem, hence why it wasn't on the list. When I was growing up in the 70s, I can't recall more than a couple of people having asthma with inhalers, and nobody had Type 2.KxMx said:The medical exemption list is definitely antiquated and decades over due for review. Many other conditions need to be added.
The cost of reviewing what medicines are and aren't allowed free per condition (ie diabetes) would be vast and dwarf the cost of being free across the board IMO.
A PPC needn't break the bank, you can pay £10.40 per month over 10 months, £2 a week basically.