Quizzes & Puzzles5 mins ago
Doctors prescribing cheap alternatives to babies??????
37 Answers
15 month old baby who has been suffering from eczema and doctor has given Oilytum to bath him with (one bottle a month 125ml cost to buy £5.40) suddenly decides its too expensive to give him every month prescribes him with
Aqueous cream BP £1.25 over the counter. Reviews are bad onb thisd cream it thins the already thin skin and causes stinging effect. It’s cheap and nasty. But very cheap cheaper then oilytum
What would you do??/ new doctor very young from abroad
Aqueous cream BP £1.25 over the counter. Reviews are bad onb thisd cream it thins the already thin skin and causes stinging effect. It’s cheap and nasty. But very cheap cheaper then oilytum
What would you do??/ new doctor very young from abroad
Answers
it will be the PCT probably, not the GP themselves that has banned or restricted the prescritions of Oilatum. When i was a teenager 20 years ago the GP would not prescribe it as it was an over the counter medicine i could buy myself, so i don't think it's a new thing about the GP's not prescribing it.
If £5 doesn't seem very much out of a prescribing budget, then...
If £5 doesn't seem very much out of a prescribing budget, then...
12:48 Thu 02nd Feb 2012
Thanks... Its clear from the easily googleable stuff aqueous cream is good as a cleanser (its original use.).. but not so good as a moisturiser. I have used it in the past but added other things to it including aromatherapy oils and liquid paraffin which was fine on my sensitive adult skin but would be reluctant to use it on a little one as even unadulterated if it gets into cuts or scratches it does sting a bit
Hi, have you tried looking at the burts bees baby stuff? There is an incredible amount of anecdotal evidence in support of it and excema. It is not cheap but worth a look maybe? It certainly won't have any skin thinning issues. Just type 'burts bees baby excema into Google and have a read.
Good kyck
Good kyck
it will be the PCT probably, not the GP themselves that has banned or restricted the prescritions of Oilatum. When i was a teenager 20 years ago the GP would not prescribe it as it was an over the counter medicine i could buy myself, so i don't think it's a new thing about the GP's not prescribing it.
If £5 doesn't seem very much out of a prescribing budget, then it's not very much for the parents either.
PS the prescribing budget for my PCT area (which covers 1/2 a county, approx 500 000 people) is over £60million a year. That's a hell of a lot of money for taxpayers to spend, and it doesn't seem unreasonable to me to expect parents to spend around £60 a year for their baby's comfort. Most people have no idea what drugs actually cost, and moan about the prescription charge not realising it represents a very small fraction of what the drugs actually cost.
If £5 doesn't seem very much out of a prescribing budget, then it's not very much for the parents either.
PS the prescribing budget for my PCT area (which covers 1/2 a county, approx 500 000 people) is over £60million a year. That's a hell of a lot of money for taxpayers to spend, and it doesn't seem unreasonable to me to expect parents to spend around £60 a year for their baby's comfort. Most people have no idea what drugs actually cost, and moan about the prescription charge not realising it represents a very small fraction of what the drugs actually cost.
I phoned the doctor and asked why baby has been given completely new product to use, and that I am not happy with the reviews and what I feel is not good for the baby. I faxed over some information and asked the receptionist to get the doctor to call me.
There are 5 doctors in this surgery – this young doctor is new to us and I feel he made the wrong decision.
Changing new drugs and products on babies has bad effect with out any consultation or choice he gave the baby 5 big tubes of this cream – to me it’s seems careless and not paying attention to what the baby needs
There are 5 doctors in this surgery – this young doctor is new to us and I feel he made the wrong decision.
Changing new drugs and products on babies has bad effect with out any consultation or choice he gave the baby 5 big tubes of this cream – to me it’s seems careless and not paying attention to what the baby needs
Look here this would last for months !
http://www.ebay.co.uk...L&hash=item20c20d0abf
http://www.ebay.co.uk...L&hash=item20c20d0abf
Now GPs are no longer to be expert medics alone but must be managers too, it may be difficult to find a GP who prescribes regardless of budget issues, and has any budget left after January. When control of budgets are passed down the line like that one hits the "area lottery" problem where either the local control happens to do what you wish, or does what someone else is hoping for. Not a good system IMO.
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