A person who has been prescribed ADD meds should MOST DEFINITELY take them on weekends if he is going to be driving. Driving requires significant attention to detail and focus and is just as, or more important, than schoolwork when it comes to the meds.
Kids with ADD should not take meds just take red #40 food coloring out of there diet and give them Attention you can get it at health stores. They don't meds you can take care of that your self Doctors want tell you that they want to drug them up with ADHD meds!
I have gained 45lbs in last year on meds I'm going crazy .....
Read the bottle
You should only take meds that are prescribed by your doctor for your condition. Sometimes epileptic seizures can be brought on by stress. In that case, epilepsy meds would be appropriate. In either case, you should see your doctor.
As long as the meds are being taken as prescribed and for legitimate purposes, and not being abused, then it should not affect your chance of getting custody. But if you are abusing them, including 'doctor hopping' by going to multiple doctors to obtain the prescriptions, then yes, it absolutely can affect your chance of gettting custody of your children.Also, depending on the type of pain meds, you should never drive while you are taking the meds, especially if your children are in the car with you. Otherwise, this could result in you losing custody of your children, too.
Take your pain meds!
metformin
get allergy meds
You need to discuss this with a doctor.
lots and lots psychology and a few pharmacy meds classes to under stand how the meds will affect the brain and body.
Intuniv is packaged as a time-released medication. That means the tablet must be intact, or the entire 24 hours worth of meds will dissolve very quickly -- you'll get a large dose of the meds right away, followed by 23 hours of no meds. As with all time-released meds, you should not cut, chew, or crush an Intuniv tablet.
Meds are great.... keep the meds up. But the thing is, the meds will only do so much for you. Telling people what's going on inside your head can be daunting and scary, but it's really the only way to get all the way better. Sometimes talking through what you're going through is painful, and intimidating, and it's scary to let people know that much about you, how much weird stuff is going through your head and how much you hurt.... But it's a really good idea, because while the meds can start you off in the right direction, they can't make you better on their own. You can do it. Reach out. : - ).