Buying Pain Medications
In order to comply with regulations designed to prevent the abuse of pain medications, affiliated registered pharmacies strictly adhere to certain guidelines when processing orders. To help you better understand the processes involved and to avoid misunderstandings, we have written this how to guide to buying painkillers.
Monthly Limits on Painkillers
There is a strict 30-day-period limitation on the quantity of medications that can be provided to an individual. This varies according to the medication and the dosage. Please consult the list of maximum allowances here:
A log of purchases is maintained by the pharmacy so in the event that a patient attempts to buy more than this limit by using a different website then the request will still be refused.
Pain medications can only be sent to the person who is paying for the medication. In other words, somebody else cannot pay for your medicines.
How Payments Are Processed
NOTE: All payments are now by bank transfer. Your medication can be shipped the same day as the payment if you contact the pharmacy team and send them the printout from your online wire transaction.
If you use a Hotmail or AOL email address, then it is likely that the email from the pharmacy will end up in your spam folder. So you should log into the chat system in the patients portal after placing your order, otherwise there may be unnecessary delays.
This sophisticated system allows the doctor to reference your consultation, if necessary, and get your response to any questions. This safeguards your health and also protects the doctor’s professionalism at the same time. Your timely response to these simple questions will allow the doctor to authorize your prescription. Your order is then passed to the pharmacy fulfillment team. If this occurs prior to 3pm, then you are guaranteed next-day delivery.
There are a number of reasons why your order might fail as outlined above. For example, you may not follow up and login to the chat system. Or you may attempt to re-order your medications too early thereby violating the maximum amount of pills in the 30 day limitation period, or the doctor may decline the prescription on medical grounds.