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At the doctor's office

Survival0200

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I have a doctor's appointment coming up, and I was just wondering if its okay to mention any drug names?

If they ask if there's anything "that has worked before" -- can I just answer that "I have had benefit from Ativan before"? Do they really want to know or is it a trick question? :unsure:
 
If you have records of being prescribed a drug before it’s fine to mention if it worked if asked.

It’s always best to never mention drug names and instead lead them on with symptoms AND effects on quality of life (can’t sleep, can’t work etc). Working is the big one - if doctors get an idea that the drug is the only thing making it possible for you to stay employed, they care more about this than how you actually feel. I noticed this naturally throughout my life but then spoke to a doctor and said that they formally use employment retention as some sort of metric for successful outcomes.

Then they are going to come at you with a bunch of non narcotic or shitty drugs like SSRIs first….so research the side effects and say you had too bad of X side effect to continue it.

You reach the narcotic prescription by knowing all the symptoms and alternative treatments very well and being able to talk about them and the doctor gets lead to the narcotic through elimination of other treatments….not by being directly told or hinted at a narcotic.
 
Do you have a history of seeking drugs from doctors? Is it a new doctor, or one that knows you? What is the reason for the appointment? Feel like more info will probably help others give you advice here
 
Going to a new doctor for anxiety issues. I have had benefit from Ativan a long time ago. The previous doc told me that he's not going to prescribe it - when I told him it's good for anxiety. He wanted to try drugs like olanzapine, aripiprazole and quetiapine, but I had zero benefit from those drugs. Told me, that if those won't help then there's nothing he can do. Maybe he thinks that I just want the Ativan (which I don't) ... so, this experience has made me a bit careful on what I can say at the appointment. I'm not so good at interracting with people - especially doctors. I just wouldn't like to get misunderstood. (I have a legitimate anxiety issue for which I'm trying to get some help for, but it doesn't seem to be as simple as one would think!)

Disclaimer: I would be fine with taking ... Tylenol - if it would help. :ROFLMAO:
 
Honestly, it just depends on the doctor. My doctor never really prescribed me something like that either. One day, though, he brought in a student doctor (not sure what they're called, but he was trying out patient interviews and the like.) He really listened, and I think it helped that I was at least somewhat knowledgeable about the drugs I was prescribed at the time. I mentioned clonazepam to him, and he went outside, talked to my doctor, and the doctor approved it. That was after about maybe a year or two of him trying to treat my anxiety. But I have a good relationship with him and some disorders. Older doctors tend to like benzos more than the younger ones from personal experience.

You could probably tell them your history of trying meds that didn't work, list them off and the like. But I think the most important thing is building rapport with them. Have a few more visits maybe before you bring it up. Your best bet would be unfortunately just waiting a bit for them to trial you on different medications, because they usually don't go straight to benzodiazepines. Then mention some kind of side effect or something that's affecting anything important in your life. You can't sleep, you're constantly nauseous, whatever sounds worse. Oh, and I started full on crying in front of my doc once about and because of my anxiety. That probably helped. The safest thing to do would be like the others said up this thread, just guide them towards it, but that takes time. I was lucky.

But yeah, after those first few appointments, and after they throw more pills at you, you could probably mention that Ativan worked for you some time ago and that these aren't working. Maybe mispronounce the name a little. Whatever you think is best.
Oh, and it helps if you're prescribed something else like an SSRI or SNRI with it too. You don't have to take it, just be prescribed it. I think that makes them understand more that "ok, this SSRI/SNRI isn't enough"
 
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