Here we go...

When I worked in a Boots pharmacy in the late 1960s all pharmacists and doctors used a booklet called `MIMS' which listed every branded drug and contained everything that we needed to know about which drug shouldn't be used with which. It still exists but I think it's online now. There should be no excuse for any doctor who has records on the patient ever giving them two drugs known to interact dangerously. In those days, almost all prescriptions were made up by the local pharmacist who knew the patient well and provided a second line of defence. We would phone the GP and say are you sure that you want us to give Mrs Bloggs a bottle of A when she's taking tablets of B?"EileenDavid wrote:Our neighbour was phoned by another doctor in the practice at the new health centre telling her that she has nearly killed herself using two drugs that have been prescribed to her by her doctor that combat each other and should never be taken together. Eileen
Does this make them more effective?Moh wrote: (just finished 2 wees on them).