Expensive Compounf Tirz is So Much Safer than Gray!

Status
Not open for further replies.
My compound stockpile is embarrassing. Now that I have switched gears, my bank account is sighing in relief. The Reddit Tirz forums are great for the before and after pics, but the toxicity level is high, and egos are out of control. Much more chilled and higher IQ here. I am never going back to Compound.
 
BUD is from the day it was dispensed [to the patient], not the day it was compounded. The timing/date is accurate.

Whoever wrote that doesn't understand as much as they think they do.
 
200-12898f477a67.gif


FVCK Compound
 

Attachments

  • 200-12898f477a67.gif
    200-12898f477a67.gif
    56.9 KB · Views: 1
If it sounds too good to be true, it probably isn't. I never would have done what that guy did.
 
I was recently prescribed Zepbound.

I have a weird mixed emotion about this...I feel like I'm selling out to "the man"! 😆
 
cheaperseeker said:
BUD is from the day it was dispensed [to the patient], not the day it was compounded. The timing/date is accurate.

Whoever wrote that doesn't understand as much as they think they do.
From an analytical lab site:

A beyond-use date, also known as BUD, is the date, or hour and date, beyond which a compounded preparation, sterile or nonsterile, cannot be used and should be set based on the date or date and time of compounding.
 
homebrew said:
From an analytical lab site:

A beyond-use date, also known as BUD, is the date, or hour and date, beyond which a compounded preparation, sterile or nonsterile, cannot be used and should be set based on the date or date and time of compounding.

From drugs.com:

"At the pharmacy, "beyond-use" dates are often put on the prescription bottle label given to the patient. These dates often say "do not use after..." or "discard after..." and are required by the Board of Pharmacy in many states. These dates are typically one year from the date of fill."

The Date of Fill (DOF) refers to the date when a prescription medication is filled and dispensed to a patient by a pharmacy.

ETA: Compound pharmacies usually don't reconstitute (i.e."compound") the medication until the fill request is received.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Trending content

Members online

No members online now.

Forum statistics

Threads
2,620
Messages
55,146
Members
1
Latest member
Admin
Back
Top