I have been informed that you can purchase the freestyle libre say from Boots at cost price (£35) if you show your medical exemption card (all diabetics should have one) Not the £60 Boots quote for normal purchase. Anybody know if this is correct?
I've no idea about this, but I just wanted to point out that not all people with diabetes have an exemption card. I'm over 60, for example, so I get free prescriptions on grounds of age, so my exemption certificate is no longer needed. Also people who control their diabetes by diet and exercise alone don't get free prescriptions, would they be able to benefit from any special deal?I have been informed that you can purchase the freestyle libre say from Boots at cost price (£35) if you show your medical exemption card (all diabetics should have one) Not the £60 Boots quote for normal purchase. Anybody know if this is correct?
Now the sensors are available on prescription,( if you're very lucky) but the readers aren't, I'm wondering if you go along to a pharmacy waving a scrip, whether they have a system for providing you with a reader at cost. That's all I can think of.I've not heard of it I have to say. I didn't even know you could buy them from anywhere other than direct from Abbott. Obviously we don't pay the VAT, so they aren't the full price shown on Abbott's website - when you order things and it comes to 'check out' at the end of the payment process, we indicate we are VAT exempt for this by virtue of being diabetic, rather than being in possession of a prescription charge medical exemption certificate.
As a retail pharmacy business they are allowed to charge whatever they choose for items supplied as part of a private transaction, no matter whether the item is for someone's disability or illness. For items solely for the treatment of some conditions, diabetes included, you can not be charged VAT on the item, but you can still charge more than the cost price and include in the price a charge for your service in getting the product to the buyer, ordering, storing and an additional markup for profit also. But they can not claim the price includes VAT as it shouldn't (for this item at least). If they claim their price "includes VAT" then you can get them to take this off as long as you are a diabetic. Now the medical exemption certificate is the most likely thing they'll check as the technical definition of who is diabetic or not isn't set in stone, but most would consider anybody with type-1 and anyone with type-2 who is prescribed medications for this also.I have been informed that you can purchase the freestyle libre say from Boots at cost price (£35) if you show your medical exemption card (all diabetics should have one) Not the £60 Boots quote for normal purchase. Anybody know if this is correct?
Type 1 or insulin dependent medically exempt. No money changes hands.
As far as I can tell, some pharmacies have been doing this, but only in error - £35 is the NHS cost price, not the retail cost.
I stand corrected 🙂 . TBH I never gave it a thought that it might be due to Libre 2 preparations.I’ve said this elsewhere, but the reason Abbott are limiting supplies is that they are tooling up for Libre 2, it’s nothing to do directly with increasing demand. It’s not like a car manufacturer selling the old model at discount, the new Libre is so much better that everyone will want one.
Once that change occurs, I suspect ‘production’ difficulties will disappear. It’ll be the same price.
If you meet the criteria then you can have them on prescription.Just wondered what the state of play is today as the thread is quite old? Where do people (self funding the sensors purchase) buy theirs from now? I got one recently from Boots at £52.50 (Libre 2) and had forgotten about asking for VAT relief. Are there better places to buy from?
Unfortunately, not all CCG's interpret the criteria in the same way. I believe some are still reluctant to prescribe them.If you meet the criteria then you can have them on prescription.
thanks, that's understood and I will discuss at my next appointment at the Diabetes centre. I am type 3c but not 100% as to who qualifies and understood its a very limited subset. Hence my question and topic related to direct purchases?If you meet the criteria then you can have them on prescription.