sleeplessness or nightmares, feeling anxious or agitated, confusion (insomnia). It is given as a pre-medication (often called a 'pre-med') before
Pre-LASIK medications are prescribed to prepare patients for LASIK surgery. The purpose of pre-LASIK meds is to reduce inflammation, prevent infection, manage pain, and control eye pressure. Common pre-LASIK medications include anti-inflammatory drugs, antibiotics, pain management meds, and allergy meds.
You may hear it, and other medications, referred to as pre-medications or pre-meds. Do not take diphenhydramine hydrochloride without first
A pre-medication (pre-med) is a medicine that may be given to patients before some anaesthetics to help reduce or relieve anxiety. Sometimes medications for
Single pre-op dose Pyeloplasty, robotic Cefazolin Clindamycin plus Gentamicin Vancomycin plus Cefazolin Allergy:Vancomycin plus Gentamicin Single pre-op dose Nephrectomy Cefazolin Clindamycin plus Gentamicin Vancomycin plus Cefazolin Allergy:Vancomycin plus Gentamicin Single pre-op dose Vesicostomy Cefazolin Clindamycin plus Gentamicin
What other drugs could interact with this medication? DIN (Drug Identification Number). , Med-Clindamycin 300 mg Capsule. , Med-Clindamycin 150
It is given as a pre-medication (often called a 'pre-med') before an operation, particularly during procedures that may cause anxiety or discomfort. It can also
Start ; Hospital Hub ; FitSurgery ; Surgery ; Your Anaesthetic . A 'pre-med' (pre-medication) is a medication which is sometimes given shortly before
Start ; Hospital Hub ; FitSurgery ; Surgery ; Your Anaesthetic . A 'pre-med' (pre-medication) is a medication which is sometimes given shortly before
Comments
Pre-med course work is heavy in chemistry, human biology/physiology, psychology, etc.
Attributing any sort of medical knowledge to a first year pre-med student gives your otherwise decent story a high stupidity factor. It's about as dumb as having a black character who doesn't eat pussy. Oh, no, excuse me, THAT isn't dumb, THAT is a racist stereotype.
Mark having medical knowledge because he's pre-med, would be like making all the cars be flying cars. It adds nothing to the story, is a distraction because your readers are asking themselves, 'flying cars? why?'.
You could add some character depth to the story by relating something a pre-med might learn in anatomy, like some statistic about boob size, or something about cum volume, or the female orgasm, which might be learned in physiology.
Fifteen minutes of research would have fixed the 'pre-meds don't study medicine, they prepare to study medicine' problem and another 15-20 minutes Googlin' would provide something interesting which could be actually learned as a pre-med, and would improve the depth of your story, as well.
Not a bad return for 30 minutes of time.
GeoD
Next fall, Daughter starts pre-med at university only to find she needs medical attention. What to do?