Yeah, sure, why not entrust your mental health to a bloke trained to take care of teeth?
A licensed physician is the only one who can write a prescription for non-over the counter drugs and medication.
Yes, a Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine (D.O.), as a licensed medical physician, can write a prescription for a medication when it is medically appropriate.
Sig is an abbreviation of Signa, the latin word meaning "to write." This is the designation for how the medication should be taken and is written on the prescription as directions.
It has to be prescribed to you; if you have a disorder that can be treated by the medication, your doctor may write you a prescription for it.
In most cases, a chiropractor does not have the authority to write a prescription for legend medication. In some states, the chiropractor can write a a prescription for over the counter medication. In many states chiropractors can write prescriptions for physical therapy, diagnostic testing, or durable medical equipment. Some states, such as New Mexico, have been considering limited prescriptive authority for chiropractors.
Yes, a doctor can charge for writing a prescription. They don't just write them, they have to evaluate whether the individual needs, or continues to need the medication.
Go to college, Then medical school. Become an MD. Practice in pain management and work with patients who suffer from chronic and possibly life long conditions that warrants taking that medication. Than you can write them a prescription for the medication once you established it is the proper route to take.
As many as the doctor can fit on one prescription pad. But a controlled medication cannot be on the same paper as a regular medication. So depending on how many different controlled and non controlled meds you get is how many rx papers you will have.
In general, you fill out the information on the prescription pad and sign it. You must include name of patient, medication, dose amount and frequency, number of refills allowed and route of administration.
Yes, nurse practitioners can write prescriptions for antidepressants. Whether they will or not depends on their specialty, training, and practice site, just as with physicians.
If you are talking about constipation, yes that is a big problem with Parkinsons. You can take Colace (over the counter) or have your doctor write you a prescription for a stonger medication. We use prescription propolyene glycol.
Tell your manager you have a condition (like I do), of depression, or bipolar, or some type of mental illness, you are on medication but it does not always work, or that you are trying to get off medication and the withdrawal symptoms make it impossible to work.