So how do you store the dry antibiotics? Box in the bathroom? Bunker underground? :-D
Right next to the suitcase nuke, duh!!!!
So how do you store the dry antibiotics? Box in the bathroom? Bunker underground? :-D
Right next to the suitcase nuke, duh!!!!
So how do you store the dry antibiotics? Box in the bathroom? Bunker underground? :-D
If you're gonna store Cipro, you need to store acidophilus. Taking Cipro is like eating a bushel of green apples & you'll need to restore your micro flora (bacteria) via the acidophilus. Either that or store more toilet paper.
WHO is lies. Trust nothing they say. NOTHING!
I have to have a "prescription" to buy flea and tick prevention meds for my dog. Are these available without a vet's prescription?Below is a list of 'Fish Antibiotics'. Dry, capsules that don't need to be refrigerated.
I have to have a "prescription" to buy flea and tick prevention meds for my dog. Are these available without a vet's prescription?
I'm allergic to half those listed
It is interesting.As a pharmacist, this scares the bajeezus out of me.
Naproxen has the same stomach side effects as ibuprofen, BTW.
Can you speak further about your fears?
There a few concerns, the first is people taking a treatment without the ability to make a differential diagnosis as to what the infection is and what the correct treatment is. I don't know if you have medical training, but I assume you don't. If I'm wrong that is on me.
If you take amoxicillin when you should be taking ciprofloxacin, you could be making he problem worse. You would be killing the good bacteria in your gut, leading to diarrhea or constipation when you need your gi tract functioning at its best. You could also be taxing your kidneys. Even if you have the right antibiotic, the dose varies based on infection. If you underdose, you are setting yourself to be colonized with resistant bacteria that won't be able to be treated without IV antibiotics.
The second concern is storage. Your pharmacy has rules and regs to wrt drug storage. The expiration date on bottles is a guesstimate based on ideal conditions. And it shrinks every time you open the bottle in a humid environment or remove a desiccant. Antibiotics transferred from the stock bottle to a patient bottle have an expiration date assigned at most a year from dispensing. And that isn't based on science so nobody knows how long those meds are good for. So unless you are going to rebuy every year, the meds aren't going to be there when you need them.
Third, duration of therapy is important and it isn't until symptoms go away. If you stop too soon, resistance.
Fourth, you will be using drugs that have different doses depending on kidney function. If you use something that is really cleared on a patient with renal insufficiency, you could send them into renal failure.
The rest have already been mentioned here.
Can't recommend a book, but you could print off the pages you need from drugs.com website. They list the dosage and length per condition. They also have listings for adult and pediatric.Can you recommend any paper printed literature for the use of antibiotics? A book that can be kept on hand for the safer use of antibiotics?
Edit to add: storage will be intact, sealed original bottles. Stored in under an inert gas(Freon), within a sealed metal container. Ambient temps in the range of 67-75f.