tomintheusa
New Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 2
I'm an American citizen. Type II on a Medtronic Paradigm pump and Humalog. I will be in Cambridge next June for 4 days during which I will almost certainly need to fill a prescription for my insulin. I have posted a prior message about how to get a Cambridge MD to write me a prescrip (using the original I'll have with me from my family doctor in the US) that I could then take to a Cambridge pharmacy. I have received many, many helpful replies and I'm certain that I can work out how to get the US prescrip turned into an English one I can fill in Cambridge. I am grateful to all of you who have already given me wonderfully helpful advice and information on this topic. It was because of all the great help you've already given me that I decided I could go ahead and sign up for the tour package to Cambridge! I can't wait for the trip! 
But several of you (and on other boards including this one) have told me something about how it actually works when I go to a pharmacy that I'm confused about. So please pardon me for being anal about details, but I have to know before I leave home how to get my doctor to word the US prescrip in American English so that when I translate it into English English it'll work smoothly.
I already know I will need to fill the prescription twice. Once while I'm in Cambridge in mid-June, and again while I'm in Southport in July visiting friends there.
[ps. Before you answer by just saying "bring enough with you..." or "bring it in a way that keeps it cold long enough..." you may wish to review the thread that follows my first post. That question has been asked and answered quite well on that thread. The short version, for this thread, is that that won't work. I have to fill the prescrip twice at two different times, due to the total duration of my entire trip, which includes more than just England and more than just the 4 days in Cambridge. I.e., I NEED the answer to the question I've asked here.]
In the US, my doctor would write me a prescription for a one-month supply, which would be one 100-ml vial, and he would specify that at least one refill was already authorized as well. I would then take that to my local pharmacy and they'd fill it. Then, when I needed the refill, I'd either go back to the same pharm or to another one in the same chain, and either one would simply look up the original prescription number, verify that it still included at least one refill, and they'd refill it. I would not need a second paper copy of the original prescription.
I have gotten the impression that the refill might not work exactly that way in England. Instead, I have gotten the impression that I would need to have two separate paper copies of a prescription for the right kind of insulin and the right amount (100-ml vial) that I would use one at a time for both the initial fill and for the refill later, at the same or (more likely) a different pharmacy.
Can someone please clarify what is the actual process and in particular just what kind and how many paper copies of the prescrip would I need to bring with me from my family doctor, in order to get what I'd need for both vials while I'm in England?
Thanks in advance, and once again, I'm sorry for being so confused!
But several of you (and on other boards including this one) have told me something about how it actually works when I go to a pharmacy that I'm confused about. So please pardon me for being anal about details, but I have to know before I leave home how to get my doctor to word the US prescrip in American English so that when I translate it into English English it'll work smoothly.
I already know I will need to fill the prescription twice. Once while I'm in Cambridge in mid-June, and again while I'm in Southport in July visiting friends there.
[ps. Before you answer by just saying "bring enough with you..." or "bring it in a way that keeps it cold long enough..." you may wish to review the thread that follows my first post. That question has been asked and answered quite well on that thread. The short version, for this thread, is that that won't work. I have to fill the prescrip twice at two different times, due to the total duration of my entire trip, which includes more than just England and more than just the 4 days in Cambridge. I.e., I NEED the answer to the question I've asked here.]
In the US, my doctor would write me a prescription for a one-month supply, which would be one 100-ml vial, and he would specify that at least one refill was already authorized as well. I would then take that to my local pharmacy and they'd fill it. Then, when I needed the refill, I'd either go back to the same pharm or to another one in the same chain, and either one would simply look up the original prescription number, verify that it still included at least one refill, and they'd refill it. I would not need a second paper copy of the original prescription.
I have gotten the impression that the refill might not work exactly that way in England. Instead, I have gotten the impression that I would need to have two separate paper copies of a prescription for the right kind of insulin and the right amount (100-ml vial) that I would use one at a time for both the initial fill and for the refill later, at the same or (more likely) a different pharmacy.
Can someone please clarify what is the actual process and in particular just what kind and how many paper copies of the prescrip would I need to bring with me from my family doctor, in order to get what I'd need for both vials while I'm in England?
Thanks in advance, and once again, I'm sorry for being so confused!