Yeah, I kind of figured that. Usually he will give me samples. All of the other things are drugs Ive taken before. But I have slightly high bp and he gave me a decongestant that doesn't raise your bp. It's doing nothing and even with my insurance it was 65. I'm going to end up throwing it out. I know they can't re-use it but I thought they'd send it back to the pharmaceutical company with a note of customer dissatisfaction.
No. I have hundreds of tablets from different prescriptions for my DS14 laying around -- he had a back injury last year, so I have... muscle relaxants, Lyrica-type medication, another type of painkiller... -- nothing seemed to work for him, and some of them actually made him goofy. I called the pharmacy to ask what I can do with any of this and they said it's law that if something leaves the pharmacy, it can't be returned unless they dispensed the wrong thing. (and their suggestion for disposing of excess medications -- can't throw them down the toilet since they then go into the water system -- mix them with coffee grounds or cat litter so they are uninteresting to anyone who might steal them, then throw them away. I wish there were some safe way to donate them at least to people who couldn't afford the prescriptions!)
) Would have been more, but I was able to borrow a nebulizer from a friend and didn't have to pay to rent one.
)
There's one problem with your argument... Drug companies don't sell their products to the end consumer. Your beef should be with your pharmacy. Drug companies often have very liberal return policies with regard to their actual customers (wholesalers, distributors, hospitals, pharmacies, etc.). Also, why's no one talking about demanding the office visit fee back from the doctor that wrote the script to begin with?What other company could get away with that???
I never thought about this but what a racket! Once you pay for the drug it doesn't matter if it works or not. The drug company doesn't have to stand behind it because the consumer can't return it if it doesn't work as advertised. What other company could get away with that???
You got some good advice about asking for samples prior or just getting a few days worth.Yeah, I kind of figured that. Usually he will give me samples. All of the other things are drugs Ive taken before. But I have slightly high bp and he gave me a decongestant that doesn't raise your bp. It's doing nothing and even with my insurance it was 65. I'm going to end up throwing it out. I know they can't re-use it but I thought they'd send it back to the pharmaceutical company with a note of customer dissatisfaction.
There's one problem with your argument... Drug companies don't sell their products to the end consumer. Your beef should be with your pharmacy. Drug companies often have very liberal return policies with regard to their actual customers (wholesalers, distributors, hospitals, pharmacies, etc.). Also, why's no one talking about demanding the office visit fee back from the doctor that wrote the script to begin with?
As a site note, it's also incorrect to assume that if a drug doesn't work for you it's somehow "defective". What you're sold is an active pharmaceutical ingredient that a doctor feels is best to treat your condition. For a LOT of reasons, not every API works the same in every patient. For a number of reasons, many related to laws and safety, pharmaceuticals aren't generally returnable.
There's also lots of industries that "get away" with it. For example, try returning an electrical component at an auto parts store or try returning a opened piece of software that "didn't work for you".
No. I have hundreds of tablets from different prescriptions for my DS14 laying around -- he had a back injury last year, so I have... muscle relaxants, Lyrica-type medication, another type of painkiller... -- nothing seemed to work for him, and some of them actually made him goofy. I called the pharmacy to ask what I can do with any of this and they said it's law that if something leaves the pharmacy, it can't be returned unless they dispensed the wrong thing. (and their suggestion for disposing of excess medications -- can't throw them down the toilet since they then go into the water system -- mix them with coffee grounds or cat litter so they are uninteresting to anyone who might steal them, then throw them away. I wish there were some safe way to donate them at least to people who couldn't afford the prescriptions!)