Posts Tagged prescription

Dangers Of Self-Medication

Pill-popping has become a common practice today. The stressful conditions under which we live, the competition at work or business, the struggle to keep up with the Joneses, has taken a toll on human health. About 50% of the general population suffers from headaches several times during the month. Dyspepsia, heartburn and peptic ulcers are other common complaints. As depression, insomnia, allergies and various other problems increase, pharmaceutical companies flood the market with new drugs. There are pills available even to combat laziness or shyness. Ingenious advertising and aggressive marketing have turned us into a generation of pill-poppers.

Self-medication is the use of drugs without a doctor’s advice. Medicines may be recommended by a family member or a friend or a pharmacist.

Reasons for Self-medication:

• Lack of time to see a doctor. Inability to get a quick appointment. The battery of unnecessary tests ordered for a simple illness is both expensive and time-consuming.
• Illness may be too mild to warrant a visit to the doctor.
• A similar complaint may have been treated successfully through a previous prescription. So the medication is repeated.
• Too much information culled from the internet or magazines makes people confident about treating their own illness.
• Non-availability of a doctor in the vicinity. The hospital or clinic may be a long distance away.
• Poverty. A doctor’s fees may be unaffordable.
• Easy availability of over-the-counter drugs.
• Home remedies that have been used in the family with success.
• Elderly people are suspicious of allopathic medicines. So alternative therapies are commonly used in developing countries.

The Dangers of Self-medication are many

1. Habituation. Many become addicted to prescription drugs such as cough syrups, anti-allergic drugs, antacids, pain relievers or tonics. Newspapers often report about Hollywood actors checking into rehabilitation facilities for addiction to prescription drugs.
2. Allergic reactions that may be severe or even fatal. Antibiotics like Penicillin or Sulpha drugs can cause very severe reactions.
3. Irrational drug combinations are available in the market. Some of them may be dangerous especially if taken with alcohol or other substances. Even food supplements and tonics can sometimes be harmful.
4. Under-dosage may not cure the symptom. Over-dosage can produce collateral damage to heart, kidneys or other organs. Indiscriminate use of antibiotics through wrong dosage or insufficient duration may lead to resistance or a sudden allergic reactions. As a result, when there is need for an antibiotic, it may be ineffective.
5. Even an overdose of vitamins may have an adverse effect, especially fat-soluble vitamins like A, D, E, and K.
6. Cheap and substandard drugs are of no use.
7. Addiction to psychotropic drugs such as LSD, Ketamine, cocaine, marijuana is on the increase.
8. A symptom like headache or nausea may be common to many medical diseases. By masking the symptom temporarily, it will be difficult for a doctor to arrive at a correct diagnosis.

Drugs most commonly used are painkillers. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs like brufen or ibuprofen increase the risk of stroke by four times in a person suffering from high blood pressure. They also cause gastric problems. COX2 inhibitors affect the heart. Paracetamol, aspirin, anti-allergic pills, anabolic steroids – any of these can produce side- effects detrimental to health.

How to discourage self-medication:
Sir William Osler said “One of the first duties of a physician is to educate the masses when not to take medicines.”
So the most important thing is to educate the general public on the dangers of self-medication. Health talks can be given in schools or colleges or even at the grass root level through talks, slide shows or videos. Every drug must be regarded as potentially dangerous if taken indiscriminately. Medication should be taken on the advice of a doctor or a trained health professional.

Proper drug control is very important. Drugs should not be dispensed without prescriptions. There should be proper maintenance of records of dangerous drugs, by shops selling medicines. Drug inspectors should be more vigilant in checking these pharmacies. Many patients rely on the pharmacist to recommend drugs for their ailments. Sometimes antibiotics are given only for a day or two. There should be some restrictions on over-the-counter drugs.

Slack implementation of drug control is the reason why pharmacists feel free to prescribe at will. People vary greatly in their sensitivity to drugs. One person’s dosage may be a little too much for the next person, resulting in toxic reactions. Read the rest of this entry »

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Special Alert – Many Medication Prices Are About To Drop!

Big news – over the next year or so, several of the world’s most popular and top-selling medications have patents which are set to expire. This will open the door for their generic equivalents to be sold, bringing about a substantial plummeting in prices for many commonly needed medications! Are you one of the millions of people in the U.S. that currently uses one or more of these medications for the treatment of a variety of common conditions such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol/triglycerides, asthma, diabetes, or depression? Then good financial news for you is on the way! In 2010, the average brand name prescription drug had a consumer cost of approximately $198.00 per month compared to the average generic prescription drug cost of about $72.00 a month. That’s nearly a 70% savings! The average co-pay for a generic drug is about $6.00 compared to about five times that amount – $30.00 – for the average co-pay for the brand name version of the very same drug! The commonly prescribed medication Protonix still goes for about $170.00 a month – its generic twin recently became legally available at a cost of only $16.00 a month. Lipitor at $150.00/month, Plavix at $200.00/month, and Diovan at $125.00/month are all on the current “patent expiring chopping block”. It’s predicted that these drugs could drop in cost to as little as $5.00 a month or even less in the upcoming months. This could represent a savings of nearly $2,000.00 a year for just one person taking just one of these commonly needed medications! Historically, the generic competition is able to drastically slash costs and pass tremendous saving on to patients, typically decimating the sales of the brand name drugs. Over the next 5 years, this will be happening to about 120 different medications!

Why this seemingly compressed bonanza of expiring patents? Several years in a row of a healthy economy helped pump lots of money into the pharmaceutical industry’s research and development teams, resulting in the creation of some “blockbuster” widely used drugs that brought in billions of dollars over the past 20 years. But the economy nose-dived, belts were tightened, and employees lost their jobs. R & D became another casualty of corporate expense trimming. The “bubble” had popped – the latest, the greatest and the next newly approved wonder drug that would bring in the next wave of billions was just not in the works. Living quite well off their laurels has worked for years, but now that the competition is being given the green light, what will happen? In preparation for the patent expirations, some of the big boys have not so subtly used a somewhat standard trick and raised their prices over the past couple of years by as much as 20% to soften the economic blow about to come. The impact of the generic drug availability is quite clear. Brand name drugs will typically lose 90% of their previous yearly revenues within the 12 – 24 months following the release of the generic! It is estimated that generic medications save the U.S. health care system approximately 1 billion dollars… every three days! We will all eagerly watch for our small part of that – reflected in the upcoming savings on our prescriptions over the next couple of years! Read the rest of this entry »

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