Naked Science Forum
Life Sciences => Physiology & Medicine => Topic started by: DoctorBeaver on 12/08/2009 10:54:48
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I have to take quite a few different medications and depending which pharmacy I go to, I get different brands. Yet all the tablets of the same type are the same size & colour regardless of which brand I get. For instance, codeine are always small & white & my morphine tabs are always medium size & brown.
Are the size & colour set by the original manufacturer before licences are issued? Is it done to make identification easier for idiots like me who get a couple of tablets out, forget to take them, then find them again a few hours later?
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These pill dispenser thingys are handy to avoid forgetting to take meds ...
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http://www.redcross.org.uk/shop/subsection.asp?id=93465
Also available with multiple compartments per day.
Tip: always have a spare dispenser filled with a weeks worth of meds so you don't run out.
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That's OK if you know in advance what you need to take and when, but I don't. Most of mine are painkillers which I take as & when required, and which ones I take depends on how severe the pain is.
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If it were big, grey and wrinkled it might be an elephant.
Oops, wrong joke.
Anyway, yes there is some standardisation of the "look" of drugs for easier identification.
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Thank you, BC