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Here's an interesting article on the subject: Should You Treat Yourself, Family, or Friends? . As a general rule, I think this is a slippery slope, and hard to stop once you start. I tend to advise against it.
Sebastian. said:Are you kidding? I see the laughing smiley but I can't tell if it's because what you say is untrue or just because it's a bit weird. Can people really get medications "for animal use" without scrips?.
Poety said:Personally, I like to order my antibiotics, anxiolytics and antidepressants from vetmd.com, I keep them on standby in the medicine cabinet for me, my dogs, my cats, my birds, or my husband as needed. I find it useful and cheap this way. Plus, its so easy to prescribe, it says "one tablet for every 10 lbs" none of those annoying dose calculations to work out😛
KentW said:Here's an interesting article on the subject: Should You Treat Yourself, Family, or Friends? . As a general rule, I think this is a slippery slope, and hard to stop once you start. I tend to advise against it.
rugtrousers said:Thanks for the link - it's a great article, short and easy to read. It brought up several interesting cases that made me think hard about what I would do if asked to prescribe something in a non-clinical setting. And it mentioned the age-old question of whether to hydrate with IV fluids at home.
How much does a 1-L bag of 1/2NS or NS cost, anyway?
glorytaker said:OK, so psych meds are not OK but what about birth control pills/patches/rings? Those are long-term but aren't too harmful.
blue2000 said:We were told at the start of residency that if we prescribed to family or friends, or "anyone that you are not staffing through an attending" that we would be fired. It's framed as a medico-legal issue, as we have provisional licenses, but I've already found it helpful in situations that I was uncomfortable with. I tend to be a person who believes that prescriptions should be written solely within the confines of the formal physician-patient relationship, so the black and white-ness of my residency's policies align with my personal feelings on the subject. Just something to think about when you're writing prescriptions...what is your program's position?
hzma said:Guys, I did a search on google and couldn't find out, how do i find out if prescribing to immediate family members is ok in OH?
thanks!
This is probaby a moot point because you'll have a helluva time finding a pharmacist to fill it.Blade28 said:If it contains a narcotic, I wouldn't prescribe it for yourself.
BatmanMD said:What about phenergan w/codeine. Its listed as class V, so the "good" end of the controlled substances, but it works well when you get sick. Does that raise red flags, when you have to chug like 500mL to get anything good out of it? 😕
Why the hassle? I have a state DEA number (outside of my training program for moonlighting purposes) and my friends/family know not to ask me for favors. Occasionally someone will ask for something, but once I tell them that they are asking me to commit malpractice and go to prison they seem to understand.Panda Bear said:I know for sure that prescribing for familiy members, friends, or anyone with whom you do not have a formal doctor-patient relationship within the scope of your practice is verboten and strictly so....
Poety said:Personally, I like to order my antibiotics, anxiolytics and antidepressants from vetmd.com, I keep them on standby in the medicine cabinet for me, my dogs, my cats, my birds, or my husband as needed. I find it useful and cheap this way. Plus, its so easy to prescribe, it says "one tablet for every 10 lbs" none of those annoying dose calculations to work out😛

mustangsally65 said:So do these same rules apply for samples? I know most offices probably won't have controlled substances as samples, but when I go in for my physical every year my doc gives me a big bag of samples. Are samples controlled?
sdn1977 said:The noncontrolled drugs are easiest - these are the Avelox, Protonix, Celebrex, Avapro, etc.....and can be distributed at will by the physician without any consequence. He/she can take them home & use them himself/herself or to a family member - no one watches, no one cares.
KentW said:sdn1977 said:The noncontrolled drugs are easiest - these are the Avelox, Protonix, Celebrex, Avapro, etc.....and can be distributed at will by the physician without any consequence. He/she can take them home & use them himself/herself or to a family member - no one watches, no one cares./QUOTE]
Not entirely true. While there's no way to track what happens to samples once a drug rep drops them off at a doctor's office (unless the doctor uses some sort of internal tracking system), doctors may definitely be held accountable for any adverse outcomes resulting from the samples they give out. If doctors distribute samples to family and friends (or anyone with whom they have no formal doctor-patient relationship), they do so at a certain amount of risk (hopefully negligible, but present, nonetheless).
oh yes - sorry....I was thinking of the legal sense as related to dispensing restrictions when she asked about "rules". Yes....any distribution of medication, whether it is by a prescriber or pharmacist, a sample, hospital order or rx, is held to the same medico-legal liabilities that go with that. Sorry for the misinformation - yes - you have all the same liabilities, but no one is going to prevent you from giving them out (ie - as in a pharmacist saying no...you can't prescribe Celebrex for your father-in-law because you are a gynecologist).