uhhhh.....hell no....doctors will not prescribe ANYTHING for self injection,unless you are a cancer patient with live hospice that would give you the injections..although it would be wonderful if you could have any pain meds prescribed for self-injection,this will never happen.
Uhhh....hell yes....my doctor prescribed me Nubain Injections that I give myself, today...so yes you can get it prescribed.
in some cases of blood transfusion patient may have allergic reactions ,in order to prevent this avil is prescribed by the physician
AM doctors attempt to treat a patient on all four levels of being. For the physical body, remedies will be prescribed.
The number or injections that can safely be given is dependant on the patient's weight and the amount of Lidocaine you plan to administer.
By giving placebo injections or anti-rabies injections. That depend on the individual patient and local legislation.
No but I have used B-12 on a sick patient before but am not sure if it helped.
A physicians' reimbursement amount is not based on whether or not he prescribed medications, but rather on the components of care provided to the patient: history, examination, medical decision-making, counseling, coordination of care, nature of presenting problem, and time. The higher the level of these components, the higher the physician reimbursement will be.
the patient will be catheterized so that he or she will not have to get out of bed to urinate. The patient will be monitored for infection. Antibiotics are continued and pain medication is prescribed.
The opinions of physicians
An appointment or a consultation.
to treat every patient who seeks care
no he should not
thrombolytic