dxmnkd316
Lucia Apologist
Re: Nice Planet X: I knew it, I'm surrounded by a-holes!
JFC. . This idea that all doctors or even a large fraction of doctors are pill pushers. That it's pill this, pill that without caring about their patients getting proper treatment.
ADHD medications are extremely expensive despite being on the market for ages. Doctors care about their patients being able to afford treatments as well as avoid treatments that are unnecessary and cost their patients money.
I've had personal relationships with all of my doctors over the years and they absolutely care about getting the disease under control. Extremely well-controlled cases are fairly uncommon from what I understand. There are dozens of medications on the market not even including the generics. Even those have variations when compared to their brand name equivalents where they are supposed to have an identical therapeutic effect. Which they most certainly do not. People who have it well-controlled can tell almost immediately when it's not therapeutically equivalent. I called out one generic years before the FDA started to look into things.
Many, maybe most struggle to get into a well-controlled state by finding that magical combination of convenience, cost, and most importantly effectiveness. It took years of work with my doctors to figure that out.
JFC. . This idea that all doctors or even a large fraction of doctors are pill pushers. That it's pill this, pill that without caring about their patients getting proper treatment.
ADHD medications are extremely expensive despite being on the market for ages. Doctors care about their patients being able to afford treatments as well as avoid treatments that are unnecessary and cost their patients money.
I've had personal relationships with all of my doctors over the years and they absolutely care about getting the disease under control. Extremely well-controlled cases are fairly uncommon from what I understand. There are dozens of medications on the market not even including the generics. Even those have variations when compared to their brand name equivalents where they are supposed to have an identical therapeutic effect. Which they most certainly do not. People who have it well-controlled can tell almost immediately when it's not therapeutically equivalent. I called out one generic years before the FDA started to look into things.
Many, maybe most struggle to get into a well-controlled state by finding that magical combination of convenience, cost, and most importantly effectiveness. It took years of work with my doctors to figure that out.