TheRiov wrote:
Vindicarre wrote:
Helping people "get back to the normal range and function better" in this instance doesn't require a drug regimen, it requires not performing the act that makes them function poorly. If you went to the doctor and said, "When I hit my head with a hammer, it hurts." Would you expect the doctor to prescribe Oxycodone to relieve the hammer-induced pain?
But SOMEONE must do the work. If as you state, this is normal reaction to this then everyone suffers from it to some degree. I'd personally be happy my doctors, EMT, Police etc who have to work the night shift are going to be sharp and well rested and not toss them from the profession simply because they have an atypical response to odd hours.
Your 'plan' for dealing with it is just tell people who have to work odd hours is to find another profession? BRILLIANT!!!!
Vindicarre wrote:
TheRiov wrote:
The issue here is quality of life. If you can improve quality of life for people with a medical diagnosis, why are you so opposed to it?
If you can improve the quality of life for people "with a medical diagnosis" without drugs, why are you so opposed to it?
It comes from that whole 'real world' I live in where people dont just quit their job because of odd hours.
Nah, the idea that you have no choice but to quit your job or take drugs is a textbook definition of a False Dichotomy, much like "If we don't have "free" healthcare all the poor people will die!!!11!!oneone!!".
My "plan" would be to change shifts. What, I can't head an expedition to Atlantis, pursue a doctorate full-time, continue with my current employment and be the primary care-giver to my daughters...Doctor, I need some drugs, stat! If you can improve the quality of life for people "with a medical diagnosis" without drugs, why are you so opposed to it? If you went to the doctor and said, "When I hit my head with a hammer, it hurts." Would you expect the doctor to prescribe Oxycodone to relieve the hammer-induced pain?
Vindicarre wrote:
TheRiov wrote:
Why WOULDN'T I give it to her?
Because it creates an addiction to the drug; causes seizures, hallucinations and delusions (AKA psychosis), paranoia, aggression, irritability and mood swings, a frenzied, abnormally excited mood, as well as seizures and sudden death in children and teenagers.
TheRiov wrote:
Please.
You asked, I answered. No teenage girl eye-rolling required. That, much like the egregious use of exclamation points and ALL CAPS give the appearance of irrationality and immaturity.
TheRiov wrote:
Have you looked at the potential side effects of ANY drug? They have to do it for aspirin.
Yes, I have, and amazingly, aspirin's side effects don't include psychosis, paranoia, aggression, irritability and mood swings, a frenzied, abnormally excited mood, or seizures and sudden death in children and teenagers.
They are required to "do it" because they are known side effects. Amphetamines do **** to you, ask ds.
TheRiov wrote:
Its a miracle they don't have to post an identical list for water.
No miracle, the nanny-state many advocate for so vigorously just hasn't advanced that far yet.
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"Dress cops up as soldiers, give them military equipment, train them in military tactics, tell them they’re fighting a ‘war,’ and the consequences are predictable." —Radley Balko