And this isn't an ailment, but a case could be made for oral contraceptives.
That's why I made a special note about antibiotics. But it is ironic that it's OK to hurt yourself with aspirin or alcohol or even herbal supplements, but you are not allowed to make an informed decision on other safer medications.
I generally agree, but more often than not, in my experience, visiting a doctor is a waste of time and money, as I can predict what they will prescribe and why.
I certainly wouldn't try or want to avoid the doctor if the problem is outside the scope of my knowledge. But I guess we can't all be held responsible for our actions.
Shouldn't there be some way to avoid paying an "electirician tax" every time I need wiring done in my house?
I'm not saying electricians are useless (OK, maybe a little bit), but if you have no extra money, and you think you are experienced enough with wiring and/or educated enough with electronics, shouldn't you be allowed to rewire your house?
Now please repeat regarding plumbers, engineers, airplane pilots, or any other profession that requires specific training and licensure.
Certainly an argument could be made that some drugs that are now sold only by prescription are safe enough that they should be sold over the counter. I suspect that you will find that the main impediment to this being done is drug companies, not physicians.
On another post, you comment that your doctor won't see you because you owe him money. In which case, it is neither the doctor nor the law which is causing you the problem, but rather that you didn't pay your bill.
I understand that circumstances occur where bills go unpaid or partially paid; but that is a very different issue than referring to a "doctor tax" on prescription meds.
It would appear that you are indeed being held responsible for the results of your actions: Had you paid your doctor bill, you would not be in this pass. Apparently, you have money for the prescription, but not your doctor?
Is there a friend you can turn to, or a discounted drug program? (Most pharmaceutical companies have them, especially for products that have no generic, are expensive, and are for ongoing conditions.)
I suspect that you will find that the main impediment to this being done is drug companies, not physicians.
Would it be wrong to falsify a request for prescription I need? Illegal, maybe, but wrong?
Really? I didn't know that. I guess electricians licenses are optional. I wonder why electricians bother getting themThat's a terrible analogy since you can rewire your house.
Intellectually dishonest? I thought it was quite apt. We require electricians to be licensed because faulty wiring causes fires. We require plumbers to be licensed because we don't want pipes to leak and cause damage and health problems.We require engineers to be licensed so the bridges they build don't fall down. We require pilots to be licensed so they don't crash planes.Your analogy is intellectually dishonest and fails.
Why would you be interested in elaboration by someone who is intellectually dishonest?Please elaborate.
Well, it would be stupid, but that's not necessarily "wrong." Personally, I'm in favor of stupid people killing themselves with drugs that they don't understand.
The basic problem with this whole idea is that the people who are the most likely to make mistakes are the least likely to believe that they might make mistakes.
While you, personally, may have the equivalent of a self-taught M.D. and Ph.D. in pharmacy (although you must admit the odds are against that), consider the problem of my idiot cousin who believes that bathroom grout is a suitable adhesive for building material, and therefore considers the local building code to be a conspiracy of carpenters.
In theory at least, the reason that drugs are not available OTC is because there's either too high a risk they will be abused, or there's too high a risk they will be misused.
People are notorious for presenting the same (or similar) symptoms for all sorts of underlying reasons, and if you take a drug for something "because you've had this before" you may well be taking the wrong drug for a completely different reason. And the worse your judgement, the more stubbornly you are likely to hold onto your wrong and dangerous ideas.
Now, we can argue about lots of drugs that should be OTC and aren't,... but I'm perfectly happy with the idea that my cousin, who knows as much about medicine as he does about carpentry, isn't trying to diagnose for his children.
(Oh, why aren't doctors subject to this, you ask? Well,... they are. That's why doctors are required to pass tests in medical school, pass boards, and get CMA credits throughout their careers. The ones who are too incompetent to know how incompetent they are are the ones who wash out, because other people will forcibly remove them from the profession.)
How about the FDA?
Would it be wrong to falsify a request for prescription I need? Illegal, maybe, but wrong?
Why or why not?
Really? I didn't know that. I guess electricians licenses are optional. I wonder why electricians bother getting them.
Intellectually dishonest? I thought it was quite apt. We require electricians to be licensed because faulty wiring causes fires. We require plumbers to be licensed because we don't want pipes to leak and cause damage and health problems.We require engineers to be licensed so the bridges they build don't fall down. We require pilots to be licensed so they don't crash planes.
Certain drugs are restricted because they are dangerous when misused or even when used properly. Prescription drugs kill thousands of people a year.
It is also dangerous for someone to use a drug to treat a symptom of a disease that has not been properly diagnosed.
"Oh, that bleeding is just my colitis. It happens all the time. I'll just take some drugs I learned about on the internet". Whoops. It was cancer. Now it's metastatic. Too late.
Why would you be interested in elaboration by someone who is intellectually dishonest?
The drug companies and the FDA decide what drugs will be prescription only and which will be OTC. This is out of my area of specialty (I don't even prescribe drugs), but I suspect that it is the drug manufacturer who requests that a prescription drug be made available over the counter. This is often done at a reduced dose, which seems a bit silly to me: OTC motrin is 200 mg, while prescription motrin is 400, 600, or 800 mg. There is nothing to stop someone form taking 4 200 mg tablets and getting the "prescription" 800 mg dose.
If I am not mistaken, several drugs like Zantac have become available over the counter just after they come off patent. I suspect the manufactureres choose to make up in volume what they lose when their monopoly ends.
My guess is it has something to do with the law, and not some magical property of the license. Are you seriously suggesting that people are incompetent to solve problems if they don't have licenses? If so, that's a false dilemma.
Some of this is probably the equivalent of over the counter drugs: simple, relatively safe things that prudent amateurs can handle themselves. The rest is illegal and potentially dangerous. Fires are caused by faulty wiring all the time.I know people who do their own plumbing, rewire their own homes and so on. More importantly, I'm not familiar with any laws which require them to get permission from a plumber or an electrician to buy plumbing supplies.
Now it is your analogy that is faulty. You may not need persmission to buy a plane, but you sure need permission from the FAA to fly a plane. Do you want to buy drugs or take them?Last time I checked, you didn't have to get permission from a pilot to buy a plane.
Really? I didn't know that. I guess electricians licenses are optional. I wonder why electricians bother getting them
No, I am suggesting that it is worthwhile to have a system where people who perform dangerous jobs have demonstrated proficiency in that job.
The license is not magical, and does not guarantee that you will not make a mistake, but it does demonstrate that you have mastered necessary skills so as not to be a hazard to yourself and your community.
I don't know what the laws are where you live, but when a contractor builds a house doesn't the wiring and plumbing need to be supervised by licensed electricians and plumbers? If you wish to rewire or replumb your house, don't you need a building permit? Doesn't the building inspector need to sign off on it?
Some of this is probably the equivalent of over the counter drugs: simple, relatively safe things that prudent amateurs can handle themselves.
The rest is illegal and potentially dangerous. Fires are caused by faulty wiring all the time.
Now it is your analogy that is faulty. You may not need persmission to buy a plane, but you sure need permission from the FAA to fly a plane. Do you want to buy drugs or take them?
From what I can glean from the non-answers to my questions (), the OP is talking about self-diagnosis and treatment of mood disorders. Taking this into consideration, what is being asked for is what already happens - just too slow, in this particular case, to solve his current problem. When medications are made OTC, what is taken into consideration are just the sorts of questions that I asked earlier - what condition does the drug treat? how amenable is it to self-diagnosis and self-monitoring? is it relatively easy to use the drug safely? If the answers to those questions are reasonable, as Richard demonstrates they may be, then those drugs will be moved to OTC status.
I doesn't seem out of the realm of possibility that some anti-depressants may be made over-the-counter. What hasn't been shown here, is that considering the issue on a case-by-case basis should be abandoned in favour of making all drugs OTC.
Linda
But I wasn't really asking the FDA to make it an OTC drug; I was asking for the FDA to recognize we are not all idiots.