Doodledog
Agreed, but as has been pointed out, you canāt buy them weekly (or monthly). They can only be bought quarterly or annually, which represents a significant outlay for someone on a low income.
But not everyone aged 60 and over is on a low income. If we are talking about equalising free prescriptions with SRP age then we have people of 60 to 66, many in good or reasonable health, many still working, so why would they be any more in need of automatic free prescriptions than say an 18 year old care leaver living in a bedsit earning minimum wage, let's remember minimum wage for them would be £8.60 an hour so for a 36 hr week that would be just under £310 per week and they'd pay tax and NI from that so less than £300 a week to live on and probably a lot less if they are on a zero hours contract and the and 16 to 24 year olds are the most likely age group to be on zero hours contracts. The 60 year old could earn the same working 27 hours a week. Or maybe a single mother with two children, she'd probably like some help as well.
I don't accept that everyone over 60 or 66 is one of the "most vulnerable" in society. There are a lot of vulnerable babies, children, young disabled out there. I'm a pensioner but I don't think I deserve special treatment just because of my date of birth but I would be happy to be treated the same as anyone else regardless of age.
We don't have limitless amounts of money and until that improves I think help should be targeted and that means I won't be one of the ones getting help so not arguing for myself.
Rather than wanting free prescriptions for people of 60 to 66 I'd be more interested in a campaign to help disabled pensioners, I can't understand why Attendance allowance has no mobility component like DLA, are we expected to be housebound because we hit 66? Again not relevant to me but it strikes me as very unfair.
I do think some help with staging the payments for the prepayment for prescriptions would be useful, maybe giving people time to build up to the full payment or like the TV licence where you can go onto monthly payments.