If by BOB you mean my urethra, then yes.
Too much "locker-room talk"?
Too much "locker-room talk"?
We keep a stock of antibiotics in our home, and if we needed to bug out, I would grab them along with many other medications on our way out the door. I leave my BOB in our primary vehicle, and it's not a good idea to leave antibiotics in a vehicle that can experience wide temperature swings, especially high temps.Question for the more serious preppers and long term planners that already have supplies to survive the first year (food, water, shelter, safety) do you have medications, specifically antibiotics, to keep away the chance of infection related deaths? I read that even today 5 out of every 100 kids who do not have access to antibiotics die from treatable aliments like pneumonia and diarrhea, that's terrifying!
The refrigerator is the best place to store almost all medications. My father is a pharmacist, and he says that this will extend their effectiveness by at least a factor of four.I keep a supply in the fridge ready to grab. I also maintain natural antibiotics like garlic and apple cidar vinegar.
I just called and asked my sister this. (Which is funny because she is doing rounds at the hospital now and I am picking her brain for a survivalist post.) she said in liquid form medication is not as stable. Where as in pill form it can last for years. The most she said she would feel safe with it is 6 months to a year. But she said to check it for cloudy appearance or discoloration even before that. Also she said that it has to be kept in optimal conditions and unopened in original package. However since usually the pharmacist mixes some forms of amoxicillin for kids at the pharmacy that kinda isn't practical. So I wouldn't trust it. She also said the reason kids are give the amoxicillin via liquid is mainly because of the taste. Easy to get a kid to swallow bubble gum flavored liquid instead of downing a pill.I thought about this last night actually for my kids who get infections all the damn time. They get the liquid amoxocillin. Is that stuff safe beyond expiration if stored in the fridge?
I have a laminated list of each anti-biotic and what they can be used for most commonly along with dosages (x per day) and for what length of time they should be taken for.More important question: do you know when to take antibiotics and the dosage? Even doctors prescribe it wastefully. For example: Flu. Antibiotics does nothing against a virus. You know which diseases are viral, and which are bacterial at the very least?![]()
Very good point, like most tools unless you know how to use their a liability.More important question: do you know when to take antibiotics and the dosage? Even doctors prescribe it wastefully. For example: Flu. Antibiotics does nothing against a virus. You know which diseases are viral, and which are bacterial at the very least?![]()