False Economies
Sometimes the cheapest option isn't the right one. I fondly remember my neighbours going to a well-known catalogue-based store and buying the cheapest lawnmower they stocked. How we laughed as they realised it had non-rotating wheels and died when presented with grass. Tell us about times you or others have been let down by being a cheapskate.
( , Tue 24 Jun 2014, 12:42)
Sometimes the cheapest option isn't the right one. I fondly remember my neighbours going to a well-known catalogue-based store and buying the cheapest lawnmower they stocked. How we laughed as they realised it had non-rotating wheels and died when presented with grass. Tell us about times you or others have been let down by being a cheapskate.
( , Tue 24 Jun 2014, 12:42)
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So on that premise
And being a spaz-leptic are you saying: considering absorption rates, Epilepsy meds on delayed dispersal aside from active compound are no different between: for example Tegretol SR and Generics?
I have always been warned that its kinda dodge to switch between generics and prescribed named brand.
Reason I ask is that I am pissing off again to NZ and will have to pay full price for meds as opposed to sticking with NHS script here in the UK.
Tegretol is expensive in sheep land.
Interested in your answer,
Thx much.
( , Thu 26 Jun 2014, 23:47, 2 replies)
And being a spaz-leptic are you saying: considering absorption rates, Epilepsy meds on delayed dispersal aside from active compound are no different between: for example Tegretol SR and Generics?
I have always been warned that its kinda dodge to switch between generics and prescribed named brand.
Reason I ask is that I am pissing off again to NZ and will have to pay full price for meds as opposed to sticking with NHS script here in the UK.
Tegretol is expensive in sheep land.
Interested in your answer,
Thx much.
( , Thu 26 Jun 2014, 23:47, 2 replies)
I as sock choker I've also been told this about the lamotrigine I take. My pharamcist gives me different brands of the stuff & it's yet to make a difference to me.
( , Fri 27 Jun 2014, 7:10, closed)
( , Fri 27 Jun 2014, 7:10, closed)
Well, modified-release preparations are sometimes different.
Some drugs (e.g. diltiazem for high blood pressure/angina) are available in a lot of different branded modified-release preparations, and the bioavailability varies between them. In cases like that, the prescriber is always supposed to specify the brand to be given. They frequently don't, but that's a different story.
As far as neurological drugs go, it's certainly prudent to approach any change with some caution. However, I've never heard of any problems with patients switching between Tegretol and generic carbamazepine, even the modified-release ones. Similarly with sodium valproate - when Epilim's patent expired, Sanofi made some bleating noises about generics not being equivalent, but they were talking out of their arse.
Some people are still prescribed Tegretol, but most are prescribed carbamazepine, and whether they actually get Tegretol or one of the generics depends on which pharmacy they use. Like I say, I've never heard of or been told of any problems with switching between them.
( , Fri 27 Jun 2014, 7:14, closed)
Some drugs (e.g. diltiazem for high blood pressure/angina) are available in a lot of different branded modified-release preparations, and the bioavailability varies between them. In cases like that, the prescriber is always supposed to specify the brand to be given. They frequently don't, but that's a different story.
As far as neurological drugs go, it's certainly prudent to approach any change with some caution. However, I've never heard of any problems with patients switching between Tegretol and generic carbamazepine, even the modified-release ones. Similarly with sodium valproate - when Epilim's patent expired, Sanofi made some bleating noises about generics not being equivalent, but they were talking out of their arse.
Some people are still prescribed Tegretol, but most are prescribed carbamazepine, and whether they actually get Tegretol or one of the generics depends on which pharmacy they use. Like I say, I've never heard of or been told of any problems with switching between them.
( , Fri 27 Jun 2014, 7:14, closed)
My body did NOT like carbamazepine at all. Night sweats, hallucinations etc. Lamotrigine FTW.
( , Fri 27 Jun 2014, 7:27, closed)
( , Fri 27 Jun 2014, 7:27, closed)
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