Tabsafe is a wonderful In-home Medication Dispensing System. A state of the art easy to use, effective solution for managing medication yet can accommodate even the most complex schedules. The security features and online reporting mean peace of mind for the user, family and caregivers. Improving medication adherence to over 96% leads to increased wellness and independence.
So my questions to all my readers: is why not take a look at the website and share this with your family and friends that are struggling with pill boxes and vials everyday to get there medications ? If you know someone that is addicted to opioid abuse (pain medication), please have them check this sight at the website address below . Take Control of your life and live independent.
Opioids are medications that relieve pain . They reduce the intensity of pain signals reaching the brain and affect those brain areas controlling emotion, which diminishes the effects of a painful stimulus. Opioids are substances that act on the nervous system in a similar way to opiates as morphine and codiene. In a medical context the term usually indicates medications that are artificially made rather the extracted from opium.
“I was speaking to a friend of mine who’s daughter had to have her wisdom teeth out, which is a simple procedure unless you get a dry socket, but that is treatable. The the physician gave them a 30 day supply of oxycontin; she only needed 10 (ten). So now her daughter is addicted to pain medication, her daughter is not 16 years old anymore, she’s in her early 20’s and has an addiction to black tar heroin.” Black tar heroin is a type of illicit opioid formed from the incomplete acetylation of morphine. It is also called black,brown,or simply tar. Holy crap, from a procedure done on so many young adults suffering a little is okay. Please 10 vs 30 then leads to an addiction! We’ve got to take control of this problem, and help America fight this epidemic.
Tabsafe can help dispensing with controlling and not overdosing those who want to take back there lives…
www.tabsafe.com
I am elderly myself. I see my husband’s pills often lying on the bathroom floor. I never know if he is getting everything he needs to be taking. My neighbor had a stroke and has been released from the rehab program in the nursing home to home where he lives alone and is fumbling the best he can with managing seriously potent heart and stroke prevention medications. I noticed that the number of pills he had in a box for the morning did not match the number he had in the viles that named the meds and the number of times daily to use them. Then he spilled them and we had to use a flashlight to distinguish the various white round pills that were indistinguishable to us one from another until you got your eyeball right down on them. If the phone rings or their is a distraction it is so easy for a disabled disorganized person to lose track of what s/he is doing that it is really scary and abusive seeming on the part of pharmaceutical companies who cannot come up with helpful methodologies for tracking medications.