There are several medical alerts you should ask your physician about. These include any medicines you are allergic to, and also any interactions between medications you may be taking.
This question asks for medical advice. Medical advice is best obtained from one's physician, so I recommend you contact your physician and ask this question.
if you need to ask you no chance of becoming one.
It depends on your frame of reference, but most people ask how many years out from high school it takes to become an osteopathic physician, so I'll use that. After high school, you would need to attend a college/university and earn a Bachelor's degree (usually four years but some people get it done in three), and take the MCAT (Medical College Admission Test). After you take the MCAT and hopefully do well on that test, you apply to osteopathic medical schools. Once you're accepted, you need to complete four years of osteopathic medical school and complete the board licensure examinations to be a licensed osteopathic physician. Residency is not technically necessary to be a physician, but it is basically the expectation that medical students will attend residency and go on to pursue additional training in a medical specialty.
Ask a physician; the internet is not your doctor.
Here is the American Medical Association policy: "At a minimum, a physician's ethical duties include terminating the physician-patient relationship before initiating a dating, romantic, or sexual relationship with a patient."
Yes, sprite should not affect gout.
If breast reduction is a specific exclusion on your particular plan you probably cannot get them to pay for it. If it is not a specific exclusion on your plan you will need a physician to write a letter to BCBS and get an authorization to have the procedure. If your need for the reduction is not medical it will not be covered. You must contact BCBS and ask if your plan pays for breast reduction for specific medical reasons.
You need to ask your medical team.
Need to ask permission from a doctor.
I know my Doctor's as in a panel of 8, said No!! and 2 pharmacist, working with them No, they give you,Methocarbamol
Ask your physician.
Are you talking about a specialist? Call the primary physician that referred the patient and ask for a referral to be faxed. Otherwise, do not see them.