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A pharmacist, who graduates from pharmacy school and is licensed
by the state, is responsible for filling the doctor's prescription.
A pharmacist
is not supposed to practice medicine or give medical advice.
However, in reality, for most common ailments, a pharmacist might
be able to give excellent advice, and often does. As with most
people you have to deal with frequently, it pays to make friends
with your pharmacist.
Generic
Drugs
When getting a prescription from your doctor, make sure the
doctor allows for the use of "generic" drugs if possible, rather
than an identical "brand-name" drug that might cost much more.
Also, note that doctors are known to have horrible or illegible
handwriting. It is rumored that they take special classes in medical
school for this and that pharmacists take special classes in pharmacy
school to learn to decipher the handwriting. If you tell the pharmacist
what the drug is for, he or she will have a better chance of figuring
out what the doctor prescribed.
Over
The Counter Medicines
Remedies of every description - from headache capsules to
hemorrhoid ointments, skin cream, antacids, cough medicines and
cold pills - can be purchased without a doctor's prescription
in drug stores. Many of these preparations are advertised nationally.
Often the drug store has a "house brand" that is identical to
the nationally advertised brand but at a substantial discount.
Take a look and compare ingredients and prices.
Abuse
of Legal Drugs
Though perfectly legal, both prescription drugs and over-the-counter
medications can be dangerous if misused. The tragic death of Elvis
Presley, which was aggravated by prescription drugs, is a telling
example.
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