I once tried to find a stomach remedy in China. That was a challenge.
I'd love to find out what you ate for that. No dis to TCM but I went to a traditional herbalist and, good lord, it was a little scary.
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I once tried to find a stomach remedy in China. That was a challenge.
Little known fun fact - "Long-term use of opioids leads to decreased pain tolerance and increased sensitivity to pain." A case where the 'cure' truly is worse than the symptom. Imagine taking opioids for back pain, experiencing constipation (because that's a 'thing' with opioids) AND now you can't tolerate the smallest amount of other kinds of pain. Eeeek.That is my soon to be ex, not anyone that I agreed with!!
Pain medications are nasty nasty things - I only wonder if they have helped as many as they have destroyed....
I encourage my friends and relatives to always take good trip insurance if they leave the country, most importantly for repatriation coverage, but also to encourage them to seek professional medical help if needed.Perhaps she could not find her usual remedy so she bought something, anything that would relieve the pain and help her sleep. This is why I travel with a veritable pharmacy of over the counter meds, including my most effective migraine treatment, which is also over the counter.
Someone I knew had immodium and it was as simple as that. Not a very glamorous story. Now I never travel outside the U.S. without because I don't want to have to try to read labels in a language I don't know and guess what's inside the box. This worked out better than my first time in China or when I was in Turkey and I kind of just stopped eating much until the symptoms cleared. Not a great plan.I'd love to find out what you ate for that. No dis to TCM but I went to a traditional herbalist and, good lord, it was a little scary.
All I have to do is twist the wrong way while taking off a fin next to the dive boat, or some other weird contortion that happens in diving, and I’m in pain. (Judging from the age thread, I would be surprised if I am alone in this)It can be beneficial to have a few real OXY's (or Tramadol or Hydrocodone) in addition to 800mg Ibuprofen and a Tylenol in your dry bag for a Lion fish sting.
I had a patient come into my ER for a minor sprained ankle. Very minor. He was regularly taking morphine 100mg daily for "chronic pain."Little known fun fact - "Long-term use of opioids leads to decreased pain tolerance and increased sensitivity to pain." A case where the 'cure' truly is worse than the symptom. Imagine taking opioids for back pain, experiencing constipation (because that's a 'thing' with opioids) AND now you can't tolerate the smallest amount of other kinds of pain. Eeeek.
That is heart-breaking. And it's hard to muster compassion for what 'looks' like no big deal, but is 'felt' like a very, very big deal. The brain is amazing.I had a patient come into my ER for a minor sprained ankle. Very minor. He was regularly taking morphine 100mg daily for "chronic pain."
He was incapacitated and genuinely screaming in agony over a truly minor ankle injury. All because of long-term use of opioids.
If you’ve got the , you do what you gotta do though.I bring antibiotics home with me on trips, but even self-treating with those is questionable.