Absolutely not, at least not legally by saying they are writing a script for an animal. There is a reason there are MD's, DOs, DVMs or VMD's, if there was no restriction to what each could treat there'd be no reason for going to veterinary school versus human medical school. On the flip side, veterinarians CANNOT write scripts for humans.
An MD (Medical Doctor) can write prescriptions for any drug that's been approved by the FDA. The only medications/drugs a MD cannot write out are drugs deemed illegal as a "controlled substance." This would be like, Cocaine, Meth, etc.
Go to college, Then medical school. Become an MD. Practice in pain management and work with patients who suffer from chronic and possibly life long conditions that warrants taking that medication. Than you can write them a prescription for the medication once you established it is the proper route to take.
No a nurse practitioner cannot write a prescription, only an MD can.I am a Nurse Practitioner and I can and do write prescriptions for medicines and controlled substances ( I have a DEA number.... just like a doctor must have as well to write for scheduled drugs). A Nurse Practitioner is a mid- level clinician and we often function independently in clinical settings. We take a pharmacology course identical to an MD pharmacology course. We are authorized to write prescriptions in all 50 states. In many clinical settings- we are the primary care person- as so many MDs have left or are reluctant to go into family medicine. Please, who ever wrote this answer- educate yourself before you attempt to answer a question you clearly have no knowledge about.
If it is clinically indicated, a doctor will write a prescription for a wheelchair.
No. Only a licensed medical doctor can write a prescription.
No, a doctor cannot write a prescription for someone who is not their patient.
Although it might give a bad appearance, if the eye doctor is a licensed MD and authorized to prescribe, it is legal.
anyone any time with name and date of birth
In the UK you must not write anything on the front of the prescription, however when you collect the prescription from the Chemist you will be expected to confirm certain details in writing and sign the reverse.
Sig is an abbreviation of Signa, the latin word meaning "to write." This is the designation for how the medication should be taken and is written on the prescription as directions.
No.
its responsible to write HIII!!!!!!!!!!!