I think it's ridiculous that a CPAP machine requires a prescription. I wanted to buy one to try it but couldn't. Anyone know why this is? Is it just regulatory capture or is there a medical reason someone shouldn't be able to buy one?
For what it's worth, there are tons of generic APAP devices available on your usual 'big' online market places being sold under labels like 'resoiration device' or 'sleep aid'. Don't know if they're actually trustworthy, but they're out there. There is also a small but thriving secondary market for devices in online web forums (though for sanitation reasons, this seems like a very suboptimal workaround).
Depends on your health insurance plan. Many plans fund a health savings account that allows you to spend your money on any qualifying medical purchase, whether its OTC meds, medical devices, or heck even my yearly supply of band-aids and ibuprofen.
If something requires a prescription, it's usually because the company wants a liability chain to go through a doctor and their malpractice insurance, rather than bankrupt the company.
It can be dangerous if used improperly and since it's related to your health I suppose that requires regulation.
My grandmother died from complications with her CPAP machine (long story and user error) so I don't know that making them available off the shelf is a great idea. At least behind a prescription, more care can be put into the testing of the devices rather than churning them out by the lowest bidder for pickup at your local Walmart.
I've tried to think of other devices/treatments that are available OTC and I'm coming up short. Drugs are heavily regulated and quality tested. I think the big factor is that using the device requires unconsciousness which ups the risk if something goes wrong.
It is somewhat ridiculous - their logic is that it does require configuration/calibration to be setup initially for your pressure levels.
However - I am reasonably confident that given a prescription and some documentation - and a decent instruction manual/video, most people could get through it. (I certainly had no issues with downloading some software/utilities, yanking the SD card and examining my data during the first few months)
But - ultimately it is probably more about risk mitigation and liability for the doctor/sleep technicians and clinics who prescribe these things.
> their logic is that it does require configuration/calibration to be setup initially for your pressure levels.
Which is ridiculous. By "configuration/calibration" they mean setting a value in the software settings. Something that takes 2 seconds and could easily be done by the user (in fact most CPAPs have the ability to have the user set it, but it's disabled by the manufacturer because of stupid regulations).
> ultimately it is probably more about risk mitigation and liability for the doctor/sleep technicians and clinics who prescribe these things.
If people could just go buy them in drugstores by their own choice then doctors and clinics wouldn't be on the hook for having prescribed them. Plus there would be more competition and the devices would be cheaper and more widely available.
It is sort of ridiculous, which is why companies make it fairly easy to work around. You go somewhere like 1800cpap and they send you an at-home test kit, you return that to them and they have a doctor look at the output. The doctor writes a prescription, then 1800cpap happily sells you whatever equipment you want. You won't even talk to the doctor. And I can't guarantee this, but I suspect the doc is incentivized to always find something worth writing a prescription for.
If you have OSA and you want to put a mask on your face at night and manage the titration yourself, you’re seriously a candidate for the Darwin awards.
I would love to manage it myself of course, but treating OSA is not 100% as simple as using a CPAP. And if you are indeed stopping your breathing while you are sleeping, do you personally want to be responsible for setting the machine properly?
You need a qualified respiratory therapist/pulmonologist/sleep doc to configure it for you (that's part of the prescription, how much pressure you need), otherwise you could really mess up your lungs (too much pressure) or make your apnea worse (too little pressure). They'll also do ongoing monitoring and adjust the levels remotely.
Not really true for most people with modern APAP machines. Most direct to consumer providers prescribe APAP these days and don't do a titration study to dial in pressures.
Pretty much all newer machines do, and most insurance will happily give you one - at least Blue Cross will, as the cost difference over a plain CPAP is very nominal.