If you are detoxing it is easier to adjust the dosage with liquid.
There are literally hundreds of medications prescribed for heart patients. It completely depends on the patient's heart condition and their other medical conditions.
Docter does not seem to be an official person and/or company. However, doctors often prescribe medicine to their patients based upon their conditions and needs.
Methadone can be used for two purposes - pain control and addiction control for chronic opioid addicts. For pain control, it can be prescribed by most physicians, but some physicians will not prescribe it because of the connotations it carries along with it. For addiction treatment, only certified addiction specialists can prescribe it. Other physicians can get certified by undergoing training for addiction treatment.
Specialists can prescribe medications, advise patients about dietary choices and teach patients about monitoring insulin levels.
Only an authorized doctor or dietician can prescribe the right amount of nutrient intake for patients.
Yes depending on what state you live in the are medical marijuana programs designed to prescribe marijuana to patients either in pill form or marijuana to smoke. I am a patient of medical marijuana my self in California and I buy my medical marijuana from several medical marijuana dispensaries in my town
Yes, but only for veterinary patients, not for people.
You have to have a valid and current license
diet that prescribed to patient with such a desease
The pharmacists dispense drugs based on what doctors prescribe for their patients.
No, doctors typically cannot prescribe medication over the phone for patients in need of immediate treatment. In most cases, a doctor needs to physically examine a patient before prescribing medication.
The FDA is issuing this public health advisory to alert patients and their caregivers and health care professionals to the following important safety information: · Patients should take methadone exactly as prescribed. Taking more methadone than prescribed can cause breathing to slow or stop and can cause death. A patient who does not experience good pain relief with the prescribed dose of methadone, should talk to his or her doctor. · Patients taking methadone should not start or stop taking other medicines or dietary supplements without talking to their health care provider. Taking other medicines or dietary supplements may cause less pain relief. They may also cause a toxic buildup of methadone in the body leading to dangerous changes in breathing or heart beat that may cause death. · Health care professionals and patients should be aware of the signs of methadone overdose. Signs of methadone overdose include trouble breathing or shallow breathing; extreme tiredness or sleepiness; blurred vision; inability to think, talk or walk normally; and feeling faint, dizzy or confused. If these