If you're getting different prescriptions from different doctors, there has to be some sort of check and balance in there somewhere.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Any doctor will admit that any drug can have side effects, and that writing a prescription involves weighing the potential benefits against the risks.
Keep a watch also on the faults of the patients, which often make them lie about the taking of things prescribed.
I have two doctors, my left leg and my right.
Medications almost always do it better if they're used in conjunction with other supports.
If medicine was practiced in 1965 the way it's practiced today, there's no question that prescriptions would have been included in Medicare.
Prescription: A physician's guess at what will best prolong the situation with least harm to the patient.
I recently have had a full hip replacement and a liver transplant, and I'm getting used to the medication.
There is a clear matter that I am not a practicing physician; I have never been a practitioner; everybody has known for decades.
The doctors, whether based in Brussels or Paris, draw the same conclusions and write the same prescriptions.
When you go from one place to another, you go with experience, you don't go with prescriptions.