Not unless they are also a Licensed Physician (Psychiatrist, General Practitioner, etc.)
Yes, a nurse practitioner can write a prescription for Viagra. Just as with physicians, however, he or she may not normally do so in his or her practice. (For example, it's hard to imagine a pediatric nurse practitioner writing a prescription for Viagra.)
Nurse practitioners can write prescriptions for patients with Medicare.
Cht.
A hypnosis practitioner also known as a hypnotist is a person who performs hypnosis on someone else.
Only a qualified medical practitioner is allowed to write a medical prescription. If you need to ask the question above, you are not qualified and can not legally prescribe drugs!
Yes, nurse practitioners can write prescriptions for antidepressants. Whether they will or not depends on their specialty, training, and practice site, just as with physicians.
No a nurse practitioner cannot write a prescription, only an MD can.I am a Nurse Practitioner and I can and do write prescriptions for medicines and controlled substances ( I have a DEA number.... just like a doctor must have as well to write for scheduled drugs). A Nurse Practitioner is a mid- level clinician and we often function independently in clinical settings. We take a pharmacology course identical to an MD pharmacology course. We are authorized to write prescriptions in all 50 states. In many clinical settings- we are the primary care person- as so many MDs have left or are reluctant to go into family medicine. Please, who ever wrote this answer- educate yourself before you attempt to answer a question you clearly have no knowledge about.
Yes, nurse practitioners with appropriate training and licensing can write prescriptions for narcotics in most states. Contact your state board of nursing for information specific to your location.
now for my answer...it is possible, you must be skilled in waking hypnosis (yes, there is such a thing), conversational hypnosis, neuro-linguistic programming (nlp), inbedded commands, language patterns and indirect hypnosis. He need not be "in hypnosis" as such, just change his "state". Once again I say yes, you can, but you must be skilled...I am a certified hypnotist and an nlp practitioner...I know what I am talking about.
If it is clinically indicated, a doctor will write a prescription for a wheelchair.
Not unless they have legally acquired a prescription pad.
You can get a prescription for medication from a licensed healthcare provider, such as a doctor, nurse practitioner, or physician assistant. They can evaluate your condition and determine if medication is necessary for your treatment.