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I know medication is expensive, but in the hospitals and nursing homes they won't let you bring your medicines from home, even if it meant saving the patient hundreds or thousands on their hospital bill. ...but you would feel better if you asked yourself, then you would know for sure.
I am truly sorry for your loss. Time will heal the wound of losing your grandmother.
Thank you to those whose sent their condolences.
Hopefully this will be of help to you in your decision making.
Hap
You did claim it also, right? Then down the commode it goes.
It is illegal to give drugs prescribed for one person to any other person even if the other person is currently taking the same drug. We are also discouraged from "flushing them down the toilet" because this pollutes our water. And we sure don't want them just sitting around our house for curious children or experimenting teenagers to get hold of. So what do we do with those medications? I asked my doctor that exact question when my father passed away. He shrugged and said the pharmaceutical companies ought to recycle them but they carefully evade that responsibility because it might cost them money. I did notice recently that a local, independent pharmacy started their own recycling program. You return and unused medications you purchased there and they dump them all into a big bin and haul them off somewhere to be cremated. All of the plastic bottles are recycled through the usual plastic reclamation centers. Perhaps you can lobby your local pharmacy to do this...
i kept it unless if doc puts him back on it again so he;ll have em.