Asher Brown & Silver Leather Medical Alert ID Bracelet - Personalised
Asher Brown & Silver Leather Medical Alert ID Bracelet - Personalised
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The Asher Medical Alert ID bracelet is made in chocolate brown genuine leather and easily fastened with a modern style hook clasp.
The strap is 10mm in width. The stainless steel plate is silver featuring the international medic alert symbol in black. The plate is attached with a matching brown suede cord.
The stainless-steel engraving plate can be simply flipped over to show your personalised details. All our tags are engraved in-house and you can choose the wording that best suits your condition. We will engrave your bracelet free of charge with the words that best describe your condition.
Bracelet Size:
Fits wrist size up to 20.5cm/8 inches
Can my item be engraved?
Yes – on the reverse of the steel medical alert plate. Up to 3 lines with maximum of 25 characters per line
How to Order
Add your personalisation in the (optional) personalisation box. Please include:
1. Your personalised engraving text: (Max 3 lines with up to 25 characters per line)
2. If you would like a different engraving plate (free of charge). The plate options are shown in the product image.
PLATE A: SILVER WITH WHITE ALERT SYMBOL
PLATE B: SILVER WITH RED ALERT SYMBOL
PLATE C: ROSE GOLD WITH WHITE SYMBOL
PLATE D: SILVER WITH BLACK ALERT SYMBOL
*If no plate changes are requested the item will arrive with the standard plate as displayed in the product image*
Specification
- METAL TYPE: STAINLESS STEEL ALERT TAG
- STYLE: HOOK CLASP
- MATERIAL: GENUINE LEATHER
- FREE PERSONALISED ENGRAVING -Up to 3 lines of text (Maximum 25 characters per line)
- FREE VELVET TRAVEL POUCH
- FREE UK SHIPPING
- FREE GIFT BOX
- FREE MEDICAL CARD
Who is my bracelet named after?
Richard Alan John Asher FRCP (3 April 1912 – 25 April 1969) was an eminent British endocrinologist and haematologist. As the senior physician responsible for the mental observation ward at the Central Middlesex Hospital he described and named Munchausen syndrome in a 1951 article in The Lancet.