Archive: 2025/12 - Page 3

By Elizabeth Cox 5 December 2025

Annual Medication Review with a Pharmacist: How It Reduces Side Effects

An annual medication review with a pharmacist helps cut dangerous side effects by identifying unnecessary drugs, dangerous interactions, and incorrect dosing. It's a free, easy step for anyone on multiple medications.

By Frankie Torok 4 December 2025

Why Doctors Recommend Generic Medications - And Why Patients Still Hesitate

Doctors overwhelmingly recommend generic medications because they’re just as effective and save patients hundreds per month. Yet many still refuse them. Here’s why - and what really matters when choosing between brand and generic drugs.

By Frankie Torok 3 December 2025

Medications to Avoid While Pregnant: Safety Warnings and Safe Alternatives

Learn which medications to avoid during pregnancy, including NSAIDs, acetaminophen risks, and unsafe antibiotics. Discover safe alternatives for pain, allergies, and depression, backed by the latest FDA and CDC guidelines.

By Elizabeth Cox 2 December 2025

Daptomycin Muscle Toxicity: What You Need to Know About CK Monitoring and Symptoms

Daptomycin is effective against resistant infections but can cause muscle damage. Learn the symptoms, CK monitoring guidelines, and who’s at highest risk to avoid serious side effects.

By Elizabeth Cox 1 December 2025

Stimulants and Cardiac Arrhythmias: How to Assess Risk and Find Safer Alternatives

Stimulants for ADHD can raise heart rate and blood pressure, increasing arrhythmia risk in some. Learn who’s most at risk, how doctors assess heart health, and what non-stimulant alternatives work when safety is a concern.

By Frankie Torok 1 December 2025

Modified-Release Formulations: What You Need to Know About Bioequivalence Standards

Modified-release formulations require specialized bioequivalence testing to ensure generic versions match the brand's release pattern. Learn how regulators assess timing, dissolution, and alcohol interactions - and why switching generics can affect your treatment.