Lithium is effective for bipolar disorder but dangerous if interactions with NSAIDs, diuretics, or dehydration aren't managed. Learn how to avoid toxicity with simple, life-saving steps.
Topical and oral medications differ in how they're absorbed and their safety profiles. Topical drugs target pain locally with far fewer side effects, while oral meds affect the whole body. Learn which is right for your condition.
Explore how countries around the world use generic drugs to cut healthcare costs, from aggressive price controls in China to smart market rules in South Korea. See what works, what fails, and how it affects patients.
REMS programs are FDA-mandated safety plans for high-risk prescription drugs. They require special prescribing, dispensing, and monitoring to prevent serious side effects. Learn how they work, who they affect, and why they're changing.
Many GI medications fail to work because of absorption issues caused by gut physiology, food, disease, or formulation. Learn why your pills might not be getting absorbed and what you can do about it.
Anticholinergics for overactive bladder can trigger dangerous urinary retention in men with enlarged prostates. Learn why these drugs are risky, what safer alternatives exist, and how to avoid a medical emergency.
Learn the signs, timing, and emergency protocols for chemotherapy hypersensitivity reactions - from mild itching to life-threatening anaphylaxis - and how to prevent or respond to them.
Discover how U.S. government policies, Medicare, and market competition shape generic drug prices-and why some pills cost pennies while others spike to $90. Learn what’s changing in 2025-2026 and how to pay less.
New medication safety data in 2025 led to major updates from ISMP, NIOSH, CMS, WHO, and the FDA. Learn how these changes affect dosing, hazardous drug handling, Medicare compliance, and patient care.
Combining warfarin with NSAIDs like ibuprofen or naproxen can double or even quadruple your risk of dangerous bleeding. Learn why this interaction happens, which drugs are most risky, and what safer alternatives exist.