Hello Derren,
I’d be very careful buying any online, if you can find any, as I wouldn’t be sure on 1) if theyre legitimate, and 2) if they’re still in date and have been stored correctly. Imagine being on a plane and having a catheter split inside you because the material has degraded, and you’re faced with a potentially life and death emergency! The reason prescriptions are needed is to control the quality of the catheters and ensure only people who are told how to use them can use them.
It is actually very easy to get the prescription, and with this you’ll be able to get the catheters with no effort and for an incredibly cheap price (prescription cost).
Basically you need to find a private urologist and pay for a consultation, which may be up to £200. You need to discuss this condition and reassure them that it’s not a physical problem, rather it’s a mental one. You can then mention what you’ve already tried, and if it’s failed. Then mention you’ve read online at the UKPT forums about some people having success with intermittent self-catheterisation and you’d like to be prescribed them and shown how to use them by one of the nurses (they’ll tell you how, not make you do it in front of them, it’s fairly risk free so they’re happy for you to go home and try it, or go to a private bathroom and try it).
If you wish to provide your email to the chair of UKPT, he’ll be happy to put you in contact with me by email where I’m happy to share which urologist I used, which you’ll probably be able to use to. Use the email address in the Contacts tab
10 months 1 week ago