jamiew22
06-09-2006, 03:52 PM
Im having a disagreement with my doctor concerning some medication I've been taking for my adult ADHD. She says one thing, but my body says something different. If anyone has ever experienced this themselves, had a child that experienced anything like this, or could point me in a direction where I can gather some research to support my debate, please let me know. Thanks!
Has anyone ever:
*Had a NOTICEABLE difference(positive or negative) between name brand or different generic brands of Ritalin?(made by a different company or such)
*Had absolutly no problem taking two 10mg pills, but have a different reaction to taking one 20mg pill?(or a similar variation)
*Been taking your meds for months with no problem, but all of the sudden, start getting odd side effects or have the meds stop working?
Jennita
06-11-2006, 03:02 PM
Don't have answers to the first two questions, but on the last one I think your doctor should know about tolerance(drug stops working) since it is a well known problem with psych meds; also, side effects can be culmative or perhaps due to tolerance withdrawals(withdrawal symptoms occur while still on medication because of tolerance).
tonymc
06-12-2006, 12:18 AM
My angle:
My Adderall generic and Brand-name affect me differently. My old doc understood there had been many of his patients (me being one) that reported it and we were able to talk about it with open minds. A fellow technician also has noticed a difference. Like the Name Brand is more potent. The crashes aren't as bad as with the generic. And heck, they even taste different. The generic is sweeter and the name brand is bitter... well for what it worth anyway. Hey, a difference is a difference.
My opinion:
If you feel a difference, your doc needs to listen to you when you say there's a difference. I had time finding a doc that would listen to me. I finally found one and then had to move away :( I'm starting to look again and not enjoying it.
My punch line:
If you doc is listening to his knowledge, his expieriences and his logical reasoning... his priorities are amiss. The focus doesn't need to be on his abilities as a doc but your needs as a patient. He needs to listen to you like he's solving a mystery.
My supporting statement on listening:
I'm a network engineer. If a user says her PC flashes a message and reboots before she can read it, and there's nothing in the event log saying this ever happened, then I don't use my knowledge of PC's, my past expierience with "job securing users", or logically say it's not happening because the logs say it isn't. I listen and most of the time, it's an interpretation issue. After talking with her, probing her for more info I realized (here you'll realize the importance of someone with a great affect on your livelyhood listening to you) that it most of the time happened when she got back from break. The "message" was a screen flikckering coming off the blank screen screen saver and not a message and the reboot wasn't a reboot but the whole scenario was her simply coming to the user and password screen to unlock the blank screen screen saver. She took it as a reboot and relogging in. This had gone on for months and four other technician that all deduced she was an idiot. I offered an explanation with a light and understanding attitude, removed the password protection of the screen saver and offered her a much better screen saver... 3D Pipes ;) I listened and she's happy.
tonymc
06-12-2006, 12:22 AM
One more thing: The sudden change in effectiveness and such, have you gone through any kind of life change, stress, difference or anything either good or bad?
My anxieties, emotions and feelings of whatever are normally heightened while on meds. Too much happening, especially stress, can render my meds useless and me an emotional wreck.
Jennita
06-12-2006, 01:54 AM
Might I add that you really don't need to convince your doc of anything; if you are unhappy with a medication, you are unhappy and there are plenty of alternatives so it shouldn't be a problem. You don't have to take anything you don't want to. You also can change doctors too. You have a right as a paying consumer to get what is going to work for you.
index.html
06-12-2006, 05:23 AM
Jamiew22 -
Your doctor should be aware that MANY people find a huge difference between generic and brandname Ritalin. Why this is true isn't well understood, but it is a commonly reported occurence that mosts psychiatrists are well aware of.