First, it would be theft; you would be a thief. Second, if it is a theft of narcotics, that is a felony charge. You would be prosecuted for possession, perhaps possession with intent to sell. If found guilty, you would receive a jail sentence and pay fines. This will affect your ability to get a job, and you will be prohibited from working in certain fields.
Third, taking narcotics NOT intended FOR YOU can KILL you. ONE pill can kill you. These are NOT recreational drugs.
Fourth, worse, YOU will have caused the person they were intended for to be left in pain! That is a morally reprehensible act.
So you would be a thief, committing a felony illegal act, and immoral act, or be dead. Worth it?
Take them to your pharmacist to destroy. Ask him or her to make a record of it.
Yes! This is one of the primary drugs that is being tested. It doesn't matter whether it is prescribed or illegal. If it is prescribed, take your prescription with you when you get tested.
Yes. They are not related. Tylenol is for minor pains such as headaches. Tramadol is a nonnarcotic pain reliever for more sever chronic pain. It is given to people who need a stronger pain reliever but cannot take narcotics. Tramadol is given by prescription. Always read the info sheets that come with any prescription.
It depends on the purpose for which the narcotic is being used, and how it was obtained. Certain narcotics can be considered medication, but only if a doctor prescribes them. Doctors will sometimes write a prescription for a narcotic when a patient has intense pain. The drug is considered medication under that circumstance because you will take it for a specific period of time and only under the doctor's supervision.But even a doctor knows that narcotics can be addictive, so your use of the medication is supposed to be monitored and you will be expected to only take the amount the doctor prescribed. On the other hand, if you obtained the narcotic without a prescription and are using it just to get high, or because you are an addict, then that is not considered medication. It is considered the illegal use of an addictive substance.
When a prescription states "take until completed" on your bottle, and/or paperwork that came with your prescription, it means that you are to use the prescription, in it's entirety, as prescribed, until the prescription is finished.
Yes! there are reasons you need a prescription for there pills, and they shouldn't ever be such an addiction that you need to take them while you are pregnant. No damages were ever proven to be done to your child, however, the state takes away babys that have adicts as moms...this includes babys who are born on narcotic pain releavers, without a prescription.
Well, to take Vicodin, you kinda need a prescription...
Generally, taking mail addressed to another person may constitute a federal offense in the United States.
That would be most unwise, as they are two different narcotics. Mixing narcotics can have unpredictable (sometimes fatal) results.
Legally, you can't take a prescription that doesn't belong to you anywhere. This includes airplanes. So no, you can't take a prescription that doesn't belong to you on an airplane, or anywhere.
The narcotics could be originally prescribed by the person's doctor.
Although many narcotics are illegal, the problems that surround their illegality are limitless therefore the government should take measures to control the demand by decriminalizing narcotics and regulating their sale and distribution.