kay63
Kay
kay63

That is the pharmacist’s job. Doctors don’t know near as much about medications and reactions as people think they do. Yes, a pharmacist can nix a doctors prescription-or in many cases suggest something better for the same effect. I don’t know how I feel about a pharmacist questioning my doctor’s script for the

More reasons for pharmacists to decide a patient doesn’t deserve or need a prescription based on ‘moral grounds.

No, instead I’m going to ungrey you so I can respond from the position of having a good deal of experience about how preapprovals for EoL care pain management actually are implemented in practice.

A pharmacist who hasn’t even seen a patient but is allowed to nix a physicians prescription at their whim is equivalent to an insurance company allowed to nix a physicians prescription at their whim which is equivalent to a government that is allowed to nix a physicians prescription ate their whim. Why do people

Well at least the Miller team obtained the evidence. Not unlike some other team that took hammers and BleachBit to real government evidence and not a banter between private citizens on a transition team.

Reinstate the draft

The Pentagon wants to have higher budgets every year. They’re afraid that if they save money, their budgets will start to plummet.

Not sure if you mean bring the troops from specific places home or if you mean all the troops stationed abroad home. Either way, if that happened, why would the draft be needed?

. . . Manning chalked the discrepancy up to security concerns around putting an exact figure to how many troops are in a sensitive region and to troops being rotated around.

This is not secret or national security type data. This is public knowledge. Google it. Lots of sources. BTW the U.S. military presence is across the globe is immense.

The United States has active duty military troops stationed in nearly 150 countries

point of clarification - are you asking age or mental capacity?