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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
THE DEA And ACCESS TO TRT TELEMEDICINE
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<blockquote data-quote="Psychedelic Anabolism" data-source="post: 249120" data-attributes="member: 45200"><p>Oxycodone is schedule II, and you cannot receive any schedule II by pure telemedicine, so that itself mitgates potential abuse. Schedule III through V do not contain any narcotics except for tramadol and low dose codeine. Even tramadol is used in combination with PDE5s for premature ejaculation, always at doses too low to abuse. As you stated, these rules do nothing to mitigate diversion and only accomplish limiting healthcare and harming people. Drug 'abusers' will continue to buy their products from the many sources that are easily accessible online. We surveyed one large pharmacy that ships to 50 states and learned they serve over 2600 physicians who do some kind of telemedicine for either TRT or mental health, prescribing Schedule III to V medications. This is just one of the thousands of pharmacies. There are far more patients of many types using telemedicine to receive long-term managed care- and many dont realize these rules are about to potentially ruin their access to treatment. Also remember, the DEA and Boards of Pharmacy have already imposed a complex matrix of regulations that mitigate abuse and diversion, including PDMP (Prescription Monitoring Programs) that track all controlled substances. There is no need for these ridiculous rules against telemedicine</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Psychedelic Anabolism, post: 249120, member: 45200"] Oxycodone is schedule II, and you cannot receive any schedule II by pure telemedicine, so that itself mitgates potential abuse. Schedule III through V do not contain any narcotics except for tramadol and low dose codeine. Even tramadol is used in combination with PDE5s for premature ejaculation, always at doses too low to abuse. As you stated, these rules do nothing to mitigate diversion and only accomplish limiting healthcare and harming people. Drug 'abusers' will continue to buy their products from the many sources that are easily accessible online. We surveyed one large pharmacy that ships to 50 states and learned they serve over 2600 physicians who do some kind of telemedicine for either TRT or mental health, prescribing Schedule III to V medications. This is just one of the thousands of pharmacies. There are far more patients of many types using telemedicine to receive long-term managed care- and many dont realize these rules are about to potentially ruin their access to treatment. Also remember, the DEA and Boards of Pharmacy have already imposed a complex matrix of regulations that mitigate abuse and diversion, including PDMP (Prescription Monitoring Programs) that track all controlled substances. There is no need for these ridiculous rules against telemedicine [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
THE DEA And ACCESS TO TRT TELEMEDICINE
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