SpunkySkunk347
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2006
- Messages
- 1,719
Multiple medications kill, and the more the more lethal, and there are thousands to pick from for a person working at a hospital.
While the only actual medicines in there, most can count with one hand:
1 amphetamine and 2 methamphetamine save people’s lives from throat swelling due to allergic reactions by acting as vascular constrictors
They stay in the system for 12+ hours? 24 hours or so? Half life of ~12 hours in system.
And 3 epinephrine only lasts 20-30 minutes, supposedly enough time to get to the emergency room for them to ‘figure it out’, but that was probably done already, and included 4 diphenhydramine
5 benzodiazepines for seizures, moderate to severe alcohol withdrawal, panic attacks, and stopping certain drug overdoses, including stimulants, psychedelics, and high blood pressure and/or rapid heart rate problems.
6 calcium carbonate for acidosis to prevent stomach failure
7 healthy living, fresh water, and healthy food
8 for patients it would save the life of in particular, massaging or ‘jiggling’ the patient’s back and such before leaving, and stretching and/or lightly exercising with them should substantially reduce their chances of death from heart disease or stroke, unless that gets them to come back their more, where their risk of dying from error, accident, or homicide is quite high.
9 the opiates/opioids are an optional. They weren’t ‘needed’ per se, but are going to have to be on this list or it would be rapidly disagreed with. They are often paired with the toxic acetaminophen (also known as paracetamol, APAP, tylenol), which is toxic to the liver, and 4 grams a day causes liver failure eventually. 6-8 grams of acetaminophen is on the LD50 death curve, 12-14 grams is on the other side of the LD50 death curve, meaning it kills more than half of the people who take that much.
While the only actual medicines in there, most can count with one hand:
1 amphetamine and 2 methamphetamine save people’s lives from throat swelling due to allergic reactions by acting as vascular constrictors
They stay in the system for 12+ hours? 24 hours or so? Half life of ~12 hours in system.
And 3 epinephrine only lasts 20-30 minutes, supposedly enough time to get to the emergency room for them to ‘figure it out’, but that was probably done already, and included 4 diphenhydramine
5 benzodiazepines for seizures, moderate to severe alcohol withdrawal, panic attacks, and stopping certain drug overdoses, including stimulants, psychedelics, and high blood pressure and/or rapid heart rate problems.
6 calcium carbonate for acidosis to prevent stomach failure
7 healthy living, fresh water, and healthy food
8 for patients it would save the life of in particular, massaging or ‘jiggling’ the patient’s back and such before leaving, and stretching and/or lightly exercising with them should substantially reduce their chances of death from heart disease or stroke, unless that gets them to come back their more, where their risk of dying from error, accident, or homicide is quite high.
9 the opiates/opioids are an optional. They weren’t ‘needed’ per se, but are going to have to be on this list or it would be rapidly disagreed with. They are often paired with the toxic acetaminophen (also known as paracetamol, APAP, tylenol), which is toxic to the liver, and 4 grams a day causes liver failure eventually. 6-8 grams of acetaminophen is on the LD50 death curve, 12-14 grams is on the other side of the LD50 death curve, meaning it kills more than half of the people who take that much.