Hi Kathy and welcome to the forum. Have you asked your GP about this? If you buy your own machine you will still need the surgery to prescribe the nebules for you so do check first that they will.
Hi welcome if you have a respiratory nurse she should arrange for you to have one provided on the NHS ,but I am aware not all areas provide free nebulisers
I have a Phillips Innospire Go that I bought from Evergreen. I love it! It's battery operated so no trailing leads. It's quiet. And it delivers my saline solution very quickly.
It was quite pricey and I had to pay for it myself, but worth the money I would say.
However, you need to check that it's ok for the medication you intend to use as I understand not all nebulisers can take all medications.
From my experience regarding nebulisers. Nebulisers either are compressor (noisy) driven, or ultrasonic. Ultrasonic is good if you need Ventolin, but no good if you need Budesinide, or antibiotics via nebuliser. It is all to do with the size of the molecules they vaporise down to (sorry not technical). So for Budesinide, you need a compressor driven Nebuliser. If you are on Nebulised antibiotics, then you need a compressor driven nebuliser (and has to be a powerful one) with an added side connection to the chamber especially for nebulised antibiotics.
As stone-UK and others say, Evergreen Nebulisers can provide advice on all these issues, and also stock all the spare masks, filters, tubes, etc that are needed. You just need to let them know the medication you will be using the nebuliser for.
I was recommended a MEDIX AC 2000 by my Gp practice about 18 months ago and it seems to work well and be straightforward to use - better to read a book than watch a video while using s it does make a bit of a noise !
Content on HealthUnlocked does not replace the relationship between you and doctors or other healthcare professionals nor the advice you receive from them.
Never delay seeking advice or dialling emergency services because of something that you have read on HealthUnlocked.