I use the Freestyle Libre system as it was recommended by my hospital Diabetes Specialist nurses. It is an outstanding advance in blood glucose testing and if I have to resort to using testing strips (while waiting for more sensors) I feel like I've gone from a 3D understanding of where my BG is going to a 2D understanding.
With the announcement from Abbott, I was hoping the NHS would take on the 4-weekly cost of £96 - sensors are approx £48 each and VAT is not chargeable on this plus about £4 per delivery.
I was called by my GP surgery yesterday to say my local Clinical Commissioning Group would not cover the cost and therefore the sensors would be available on the NHS. Looking into this a bit it seems the excuse being used by CCGs is that NICE has not yet recommended Freestyle Libre and secondly that the CCGs see this as a more expensive option.
Is Diabetes UK bringing pressure to bear on:
(1) CCGs - the authors of the *recommendation for my CCG clearly did not understand current BG testing in the real world. (all these documents can be located by Googling or by going to your CCG website)
(2) to get NICE to accelerate their appraisal of the Freestyle Libre system. I don't use test strips now except as a emegency back-up when I'm out of sensors.
Accu-chek Mobile test cassettes were around £56 for 100 tests which I no longer have on my repeats list.
However, the Freestyle Libre can be used an unlimited number of times - I average around 25 tests per day but the sensor is continuously measuring the glucose in my interstitial fluid. So a cost comparison with blood testing strips is not valid.
In case you are wondering, I have no connection with Abbott other than I am a customer.
What is everyone else's experience of trying to get the Freestyle Libr sensors on prescription?
With the announcement from Abbott, I was hoping the NHS would take on the 4-weekly cost of £96 - sensors are approx £48 each and VAT is not chargeable on this plus about £4 per delivery.
I was called by my GP surgery yesterday to say my local Clinical Commissioning Group would not cover the cost and therefore the sensors would be available on the NHS. Looking into this a bit it seems the excuse being used by CCGs is that NICE has not yet recommended Freestyle Libre and secondly that the CCGs see this as a more expensive option.
Is Diabetes UK bringing pressure to bear on:
(1) CCGs - the authors of the *recommendation for my CCG clearly did not understand current BG testing in the real world. (all these documents can be located by Googling or by going to your CCG website)
(2) to get NICE to accelerate their appraisal of the Freestyle Libre system. I don't use test strips now except as a emegency back-up when I'm out of sensors.
Accu-chek Mobile test cassettes were around £56 for 100 tests which I no longer have on my repeats list.
However, the Freestyle Libre can be used an unlimited number of times - I average around 25 tests per day but the sensor is continuously measuring the glucose in my interstitial fluid. So a cost comparison with blood testing strips is not valid.
In case you are wondering, I have no connection with Abbott other than I am a customer.
What is everyone else's experience of trying to get the Freestyle Libr sensors on prescription?