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Something
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Many
new technology and researches is done on
redefining the drugs , so we are getting
a wide range of drugs, due to which,
both over the pharmacy counter and by
prescription from a physician, a wide
range of illnesses and disorders can be
controlled, relieved, or even cured.
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Many
diseases can be controlled such as
hypertension, eliminate the irritating
effects of allergies, hay fever, relieve
cold discomfort, cure a variety of
stomach and intestinal disorders,
control stress and insomnia, and end
bacterial and fungal infections-all by
taking a medication.
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Modern
drug therapy has given many benefits,
but there are many responsibilities.
There is a great deal that the patient
has to know about the medicine he is
taking: how to take it, and how often ,
what its possible side effects are, and
how it might react with other
medications, foods, or alcohol.
All this process takes place, when your
doctor writes out a prescription.
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The
choice of drug is determined by many
facts , including information about
drugs that you have taken at various
times in your life, any allergic
reactions you might have suffered, any
chronic conditions for which you are
still taking medication, any special
side effects that you have experienced
with certain drugs or classes of drugs,
and any chronic health problems you
have. Based on it, the doctor makes a
decision about the right drug for your
particular condition.
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You
should be aware of the facts, before you
take your first dose of pill or swallow
your first spoonful of medicine and how
to administer it. You need to understand
the dosage schedule-how often to take
the drug, each time, whether to schedule
medication at night as well as in the
daytime.
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You
need to know something about common side
effects to distinguish between those
that are truly "minor side
effects" and those that are signs
of a serious drug reaction. You must
know whether you should continue the
medicine after your symptoms have
completely disappeared, or whether you
should stop the medication when you no
longer show, symptoms.
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You
must know if the drug might interact
negatively with other drugs you are
taking even nonprescription drugs, such
as cold pills, aspirin, or vitamins,
with alcohol, with caffeine, with foods,
and, if you are a woman, with the form
of birth control that you use. You
should be responsible for taking your
prescription drugs I.e. over and under
dosage.
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It
becomes a practice after reading a
common drug, used very frequently so as
you read on, you will learn how some
common types of drugs work to relieve
certain conditions or symptom and how to
read a prescription correctly and how to
buy, store, and use drugs; to administer
the most common forms of medication to
yourself or to someone else; to save
money, in many cases, by substituting a
less expensive generic drug for a more
expensive brand-name medication.
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Finally,
you will learn to identify some common,
side effects of the most widely used
prescription drugs recognizing symptoms
that will help you decide when your drug
response is not a cause for concern and
when it calls for prompt medical
attention.
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You
should also ask your doctor or
pharmacist for the latest information
about your medications; although every
effort has been made to ensure that the
information here is up to-date, new
developments occur rapidly in drug
research.
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