Some drugs do in fact have medical benefits.
Drugs that are prescribed by a doctor are medical drugs.
Drugs has its own uses positively, but if it's use abnormally, it can cause death and hazards on the general public. Consumption of drugs are supervised by licensed medical doctor.
Their medical school taught the importance of cleanliness, diagnosis, and uses the effects of drugs.
Anyone who uses hard drugs (even so called soft drugs) will become known as a 'junky'. Unless there is a proven medical reason for using hard drugs or their derivatives (as powerful pain relievers near the end of life) - then a junky has no future.
Viscosity has to do with measuring the flows of liquids. It helps in absorbing drugs into the human body, and that is just one medical use of viscosity.
There's no problem with that. They are prescribed marijuana to treat a disease or condition that they have. It's legal.
Thorium hasn't medical uses.
No.
Psychopharmacology is a therapy that relies on drugs to improve psychological functioning by targeting brain chemistry. Electroconvulsive therapy is a medical procedure that uses electrical currents to treat severe depression or other mental health conditions.
This primarily has to do with the (sometimes rather arbitrary) decision of whether the drug has valid medical uses and/or whether the drug effects are deleterious to the proper functioning of society. drugs with valid medical medical uses are legal (e.g. aspirin, morphine, depakote, antidepressants, warfarin)drugs with no valid medical uses and/or drugs whose effects are deleterious to the proper functioning of society are illegal (e.g. heroin, LSD, methamphetamine, "date rape drugs")However many drugs can be in a "grey area", where for a variety of reasons there is debate about their status. Some of these are currently illegal for the reasons above, but some people believe they may have valid medical uses and should be legalized for those uses (e.g. marijuana). Others are legal because the "law" lacks a definition for them under which to make them illegal, but they lack known valid medical uses and are often used in a manner deleterious to the proper functioning of society (e.g. "designer drugs").
Yes