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a pharmacist uses a prescription and so do patients and physician.
Levonelle is available without a prescription, but only at the discretion of a pharmacist. As it is a form of emergency contraception the pharmacist will have to establish if it is an appropriate medication for the patient.
Absolutly NOT!
You train to become a pharmacist, nurse or a doctor
yes, if the minor is emanicipated.
Oxycodone is prescription only. It requires a prescription for a doctor. The doctor specifies imediate or slow release. The pharmacist is legally obliged to dispense that and can not change it unless they get it in wrighting.
Dispense medicine according to doctors prescription
Pharmacist
Yes, but don't blame the pharmacist. Blame the doctors who have been over prescribing antibiotics for decades.
Take them to your pharmacist to destroy. Ask him or her to make a record of it.
That's chancy and sounds suspicious. Ask your doctor for a prescription and see your pharmacist, to be on the safe side.
That's right. You see your doctor, who decides what kind of medicine you need, and who then writes you a little note called a prescription, and you take this to your local drug store and give it to the pharmacist, and the pharmacist will give you the medicine that has been prescribed. That's the procedure.