I love the part where they tell you “Don’t take (product name) if …” and then list a bunch of reason, ONE of them being “… if you are allergic to (product name.)” HOW DO YOU KNOW IF YOU’RE ALLERGIC TO IT UNLESS YOU FIRST TAKE IT?
Usually, Pharma marketing folks dream up a mnemonic trade name for their proprietary products. Ambien and Viagra are good examples now baked into the lexicon. Thus, other makers, as of generic versions, are stuck with the harder to remember and pronounce chemical or common names.
Some truth there, Cosmo. I heard a TV ad yesterday for some prescription medicine. The list of “posssible side effects” took up most of it.
I go back sometimes to my youthful days. My Dad was a pharmacist. Whenever he fillled a prescription, he’d also give some “marching advice” to the customer. Like “Make sure you take this with food.” or “Rest for a little after you take this.” Works wonders.
Not sure how the drug makers think anybody would talk to their doctor about getting a prescription after listening to those adverse effects. Guess they know we just look at the pretty pictures and don’t listen to all the words.
For those of you who are UK residents, do you think Zibiloflaxinoidperaxilfanifincillin might be available at a chemist in Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch, Wales? Pharmacists in Chicago, Illinois, do not have this medication available.
I did that one time, with the APNP I was seeing, after she asked if I had any other questions. “The actor on tv who is playing a doctor said I should ask if the stuff he is pushing is right for me. So, should I take whatever it was, for some ailment I will probably never have, despite all the warnings and disclaimers?” Without missing a beat she opened her desk drawer, saying she had something even better. It was a bag of M&Ms. Yes, she was also very good at medicine.
Used to be that prescription meds couldn’t advertise on TV. This was one example where deregulation wasn’t a good idea. Now the drug makers spend obscene amounts on ads, drives up health care costs, and nobody knows what the heck the ads are taking about anyway. Ugh.
dadthedawg Premium Member over 3 years ago
…..and it has twenty-seven side effects.
willispate over 3 years ago
did they hire Mary Poppins to come up with THAT Mouthful?!?!
Coopersdad over 3 years ago
Be sure not to take this drug if you are allergic to it or any of its ingredients!!!
Superfrog over 3 years ago
And that’s just the brand name.
Zykoic over 3 years ago
Recite the side effect symptoms you have to the doctor and have him guess the meds you are taking….
JD'Huntsville'AL over 3 years ago
I love the part where they tell you “Don’t take (product name) if …” and then list a bunch of reason, ONE of them being “… if you are allergic to (product name.)” HOW DO YOU KNOW IF YOU’RE ALLERGIC TO IT UNLESS YOU FIRST TAKE IT?
baddawg1989 over 3 years ago
After taking Zibiloflaxinoidperaxilfanifincillin, you may experience homicidal thoughts…
Sanspareil over 3 years ago
I knew someone who took Zibiloflaxinoidperaxilfanifincillin and now they are another planet Beta Scorpious 7
littlejohn Premium Member over 3 years ago
If you do say the name, they will treat you for tongue strain and vocal box breakage.
nosirrom over 3 years ago
I’d be dead before I learned how to pronounce it.
rmercer Premium Member over 3 years ago
That’s as bad as sodium ethylenediaminetetraacetate, an ingredient in my breakfast cereal when I was a kid.
HappyDog/ᵀʳʸ ᴮᵒᶻᵒ ⁴ ᵗʰᵉ ᶠᵘⁿ ᵒᶠ ᶦᵗ Premium Member over 3 years ago
Has anyone tried to ask their doctor anything lately? I can’t even get his secretary’s secretary to return calls.
A# 466 over 3 years ago
Usually, Pharma marketing folks dream up a mnemonic trade name for their proprietary products. Ambien and Viagra are good examples now baked into the lexicon. Thus, other makers, as of generic versions, are stuck with the harder to remember and pronounce chemical or common names.
'IndyMan' over 3 years ago
Know exactly how you feel, ‘Cosmo’ ! ! ! !
proclusstudent over 3 years ago
https://www.thedoctorschannel.com/view/paracetamoxyfruse-bendroneomycin-by-amateur-transplants-2/
Saddenedby Premium Member over 3 years ago
yep doctor I was wondering about the ‘Z’ pill – there fixed it.
rshive over 3 years ago
Some truth there, Cosmo. I heard a TV ad yesterday for some prescription medicine. The list of “posssible side effects” took up most of it.
I go back sometimes to my youthful days. My Dad was a pharmacist. Whenever he fillled a prescription, he’d also give some “marching advice” to the customer. Like “Make sure you take this with food.” or “Rest for a little after you take this.” Works wonders.
KEA over 3 years ago
or… he could just get a bottle of Vitameatavegemin.
jscarff57 Premium Member over 3 years ago
The more syllables there are, the more expensive…
Hatter over 3 years ago
A two minute commercial with a minute and a half of disclaimers pretty much says it all.
oldlady07 Premium Member over 3 years ago
Not sure how the drug makers think anybody would talk to their doctor about getting a prescription after listening to those adverse effects. Guess they know we just look at the pretty pictures and don’t listen to all the words.
Ebenezer Stooge Premium Member over 3 years ago
For those of you who are UK residents, do you think Zibiloflaxinoidperaxilfanifincillin might be available at a chemist in Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch, Wales? Pharmacists in Chicago, Illinois, do not have this medication available.
DCBakerEsq over 3 years ago
Do not take if allergic.
buckman-j over 3 years ago
I wonder what the job naming all these drugs pays. Sinestra, Estestra, blah, blah. Maybe it’s a contest with a prize for weirdest name???
Charlie Fogwhistle over 3 years ago
That’s kind of like supercalafragi- whatever.
JesseLouisMartinez over 3 years ago
I’d be dead before I can finish pronouncing it
l3i7l over 3 years ago
I did that one time, with the APNP I was seeing, after she asked if I had any other questions. “The actor on tv who is playing a doctor said I should ask if the stuff he is pushing is right for me. So, should I take whatever it was, for some ailment I will probably never have, despite all the warnings and disclaimers?” Without missing a beat she opened her desk drawer, saying she had something even better. It was a bag of M&Ms. Yes, she was also very good at medicine.
Karptaz over 3 years ago
it must be an antibiotic in the -cillin group – that’s the easy way to ask for it – lol
oakie817 over 3 years ago
say that three times fast
awcoffman over 3 years ago
And don’t forget to tell your doctor all the things about yourself that your doctor should already know about you.
byamrcn over 3 years ago
Used to be that prescription meds couldn’t advertise on TV. This was one example where deregulation wasn’t a good idea. Now the drug makers spend obscene amounts on ads, drives up health care costs, and nobody knows what the heck the ads are taking about anyway. Ugh.