One month after it's expiration date means that the drug no longer is as strong as it was before. It slowly degrades over time and once approximately 20% has degraded it is considered expired. There is probably 70% efficacy left in the product, but it is best not to use as the degraded 30% could potentially cause harm although most likely not.
It wont hurt physically, no. However, it may lose its potency, which in turn, the infection it is treating will not respond to the weaker version of the amoxil and your condition may regress rather than improve.
The United States Army did a test last year on medications, and they found that almost all medications never expire.
So to answer your question, yes.
on the back you might have to look a little if its a month a month in a half its still good as long as its still sealed so not moister can get in it
Expiration dates are there for a reason....I would not take any chances. Just toss it out and go by some more. :)
If it has been frozen all this time, it should still be safe.
Generally, the rule for checks is that after 90 days, a check is invalid. Even those without expiration dates!
Well, yeah, but any medecine which is older than its expiration date may be weaker, among other things.
well I found out.. There's no late fee in Oregon. they just reset your expiration date 2 years after your old expiration date. but you can still be ticketed for not having current registration. price is $54.00
diet pills after expiration
You need to read the lease. There is probably a statement that says the agreement will continue on a month-to-month basis after the expiration of the stated period. If it doesn't say the co-signers will be released, they are probably still responsible.
I wouldn't risk it to be honest. Its probably ok but I wouldn't take chances
It is not recommended that you take a medication after it's expiration date. Therefore nutrofurantoin-macro will not still be effective for treating an UTI after the expiration date.
no
The expiration or best-use-by dates are for unopened packages.