A woman with kidney failure who relies on a dialysis machine to keep her alive has called on the NHS to help her with the cost of rising electricity bills.
Dana Holmes, from Doncaster, gets £96 a year from the NHS to help cover the costs of running the machine.
However, she said her electricity bills had recently gone up by at least £20 a month as domestic energy costs soared.
A Department for Health spokesman said it was committed to supporting kidney patients with the cost of living.
Ms Holmes, who is being treated for stage five chronic kidney disease, moved to having her dialysis at home during the Covid pandemic as hospitals looked to keep people away.
She said being treated at home meant her quality of life had improved.
"It's freedom because I can do what I want. I live a relatively normal life as everyone else does, but I have treatment," she said.
However, Ms Holmes said the rising price of electricity and the fact the dialysis machine "has to be on all the time" meant the annual £96 payment from the NHS would not now cover its running costs.
She said she had been forced to keep her use of heating to a minimum and used hot water bottles to keep warm during treatment in an effort to save money.
"We are getting penalised for having treatment at home. We want to live a normal life," she said.
"I'm saving the NHS costs, transport. I would like to see some recompense."
Pete Revell, from the National Kidney Federation, said people like Ms Holmes needed financial help from the government due to the cost of living crisis.
He said it was a "win-win" for the NHS to have patients treated at home as it saved the health service money.
Mr Revell said: "You get a better quality of life. Life expectancy goes up while you're on dialysis at home because you're also fitting it in around your lifestyle."
A Department for Health and Social Care spokesman said the government would help patients getting treatment at home.
They would be able to claim back additional energy costs from their dialysis provider, he added.
Follow BBC Yorkshire on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Send your story ideas to yorkslincs.news@bbc.co.uk.
When will we get the £400 energy grant?
Fears over energy cost impact on medical machines
Why are prices rising so quickly?
Department of Health and Social Care
Long Covid in Yorkshire: How many people have it, how is it diagnosed and what are the symptoms?
Tributes after 'heart of gold' Doncaster NHS nurse, 30, dies climbing Snowdon
Major Sheffield employer WANdisco backs four-day working week as ‘overwhelmingly positive’
Woodhead Pass traffic: Emergency services called to crash that has stopped traffic near Woodhead Pass
Two jailed for 'terrifying' armed robbery of Knottingley pensioner as they make off with victim's car - Leeds Crown Court
The Story Teller in Parkgate hosts Friendship Lunch as part of Dementia Awareness Week
Putin positions himself as heir to Peter the Great
Mariupol at risk of major cholera outbreak - UK
Trump dismisses daughter's testimony on voter fraud
'They will find and kill me if I'm sent to Rwanda'
Thousands arrive for annual Appleby Horse Fair
The woman changing Australia's rape laws
Why I don't want to forget Covid grief and loss
The 'sleepy' girl who changed India cricket forever
Five key takeaways from the Capitol riot hearing
Shipwreck hailed most important since Mary Rose
Schoolgirls who became Scotland's first female firefighters
Weekly quiz: What put Kate Bush back in the charts?
The 12 best films of 2022 so far
From Top Gun: Maverick to Turning Red and Everything Everywhere All at Once
Switzerland's ingenious cooling caves
When fridges didn't exist, locals had to find other ways to keep food cool
Why people believe their own big lies
The role self-deception plays in leading people astray
© 2022 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.