yes
None. A psychologist cannot prescribe medication. Within the United States one must be a medical doctor to prescribe medication. A psychiatrist is a medical doctor with a specialty in psychiatry and can prescribe medication for mental disorders, but requirements may vary from state to state.
In the U.S., yes, with the exception of controlled substances.
Your doctor will more prescribe you a certain type of birth control.
I believe a regular doctor can prescribe methadone for pain only,not for recovering addicts,for that its a methadone clinic,or some rehab programs.
You should consult your doctor and Pharmacist about any medication.
There are many kinds of epilepsy medication and different kinds of epilepsy. A question such as yours can only be answered by a doctor. If you are on long term epilepsy medication, then always talk to your doctor if you are thinking of taking any other medications.
That depends. Did the prescribing doctor tell her to only take the medication for six months? If he did not tell her to how long to take the medication, she should continue taking it until she speaks with her doctor. You should not cease taking a prescription medication without first consulting the prescribing doctor, unless that doctor tells you how long you should be taking the medication. A quick call to the prescribing doctor's office will help in your specific case.
You can take some sort of steroidal medication for the healing of broken bones prescribed by your doctor
Antibiotics reduce infection, not pain. If the dentist didn't prescribe any pain medication, you can take over-the-counter medication such as Moutrin, Aleve, Tylenol for pain. (I like Aleve because it also helps with the swelling.)
Psychoanalysts who are not MDs or DOs cannot prescribe. Psychiatrists can prescribe medicine (due to their four years of medical school training, followed by four years of psychiatry residency training, in both psychopharmacology and psychotherapy). Psychoanalysts, psychotherapists, psychologists and social workers do not have the medical training required to prescribe medications, order the necessary lab tests to monitor them, and order ancillary tests (CTs and MRIs when indicated, EEGs, etc.) as well as perform physical exams in the hospital setting, when necessary. That being said, there are two states, New Mexico and Louisiana, which allow for psychologists to prescribe psychotropic medications (after training in psychopharmacology) as long as they are under the supervision of a licensed physician.
You are killing yourself! Your liver will not hold up! Plus, how do you function and what doctor would prescribe that much medicine?
When the patient is complainning of the symptoms that the medication relieves