From their point of view, injectable morphine has a much greater bioavailability, (less is needed), is effective immediately, and they feel they have the skills to administer it properly.
More information is needed to answer this question. What type of morphine are you referring to? Pills, Oral solution, Injectable Solution, Morphine for pumps.... etc. Contact your pharmacy or physician.
morphine
im allergic to morphine and even tho i hydrocodone(vicodin) and the sorts metabolize into morphine in the liver i can still take it or oxycodone(percocet) also the medicine hydromophone ( dilaudid) is good for heavy pain and is what hospitals give to patients allergic to morphine.
not enough information. is it oral or injectable? how long has the patient been on the morphine? what is the reason for using it? operation or cancer or pain control? too many variables you need to elaborate
Daily
Morphine is generally kept locked up in hospitals. Pharmacies do not normally carry morphine. Morphine is a controlled substance because it is derived from or emulates the same opioid source that heroin comes from.
Pain, it has been replaced with morphine.
Some cough medicines do have codiene in them. Codeine is an opiate used for its analgesic, antitussive, and antidiarrheal properties. opiate describes any of the narcotic opioid alkaloids found as natural products in the opium poppy plant, as well as many semisynthetic chemical derivatives of such alkaloids. Morphine is an opiate.
The correct spelling is injectable. (Some other -able, -ible words use both spellings.)
Morphine is not commonly abused among teens.
No. Most people have skin regardless of whether or not they use morphine.
Hydromorphone is a semi-synthetic derivative of morphine. The brand name drug is Dilaudid. Hydromorphone is approximately 6-8 times more potent than morphine. Many hospitals have begun using hydromorphone in the ER instead of morphine because of its easier side effect profile.