Tramadol is not a schedule II medications.
Schedule II
Unless you're the pharmacist there, or a government regulator, you have no good reason for wanting this information. If you are one of those, ask your boss or the pharmacist on duty.
Schedule IV medications have a low potential for abuse relative to the drugs that are listed in schedule III. A physician should only prescribe for himself or herself schedule IV drugs in an emergency.
Adderall, Adderall XR, it's generic equivalent D-Amphetamine salt combo or "mixed amphetamine salts", and the rest of the ADHD stimulant type medications all fall into the DEA Schedule 2, or CII. They are heavily regulated, not able to be refilled without a new RX and must be stored separately from other medications and other controlled substances. Hope that helps you out.
Yes - it is a derivative of morphine. It is a schedule II narcotic.
In our state, a nursing assistant can not administer medications.
Well, now, nobody can write a prescription for schedule I medications. And I can't think of any schedule II ophthalmic preparations. Laws about optometry prescribing vary from state to state in the US. So, to sum up, it might be helpful if you could post your location and the medications you have in mind.
Xanax
Cocaine is Schedule II in the United States.
hallucinogen's, stimulants and depressants Schedule I, Schedule II, Schedule III, and Schedule IV.
Possession with intent to sell. The "schedule II", means it was a drug in the "schedule II" category, like percocet, adderall, etc.. Drugs that can be easily abused and can cause psychological harm..