But that's a goose!
Edit: hjonk
But that's a goose!
Edit: hjonk
Yeah, not touching that website with a 30 foot pole
And they sweat milk!
I'm in healthcare, and it would be such a huge HIPAA risk if this was rolled out to our users. I'm interested to see what the company will do with this new information. We're Enterprise edition so I'd assume they have ultimate control over it being on our computers.
To preface, I am not defending the police or the piece of shit abuser. This was handled extraordinarily horrendously. Police even knew about the guy's crimes and let him off without a slap on the wrist.
The basis of my thoughts comes from this paragraph in the article:
Police said that Kizer travelled from Milwaukee to Volar's home in Kenosha in June 2018 armed with a gun. She shot him twice in the head, set his house on fire and took his car.
I don't know any info beyond what the article gives, but it sounds like at that point she wasn't being held captive and murdered to get away from her abuser. She actively plotted and had the freedom to travel and kill him. Unless there's something I'm missing, I don't think I could consider this as actively being self defense.
I think they were just adding to the conversation
He's ruining his own life by being a moron. By not naming him in a complaint, he will not learn that his actions have consequences.
Either OP cropped out the watermark or they're reposting from someone else who did. Credit goes to MrLovenstein
Pharmacy professional weighing in.
You have absolutely nothing to worry about. Controls are monitored for what's filled. Like another user said, if you take them back the pharmacy will just destroy them, nothing is documented. There are often self-serve drop boxes for meds in pharmacies, look to see where they might be in your area (Most of the time it's a pharmacy, but can be elsewhere). Nothing is reported with med disposal.
Gonna say as well that 10 tabs is absolutely nothing. 5-325 can come in bottles of 500 tabs, and seeing prescriptions for month-long supplies for chronic pain users is pretty common.
The drug reporting watches for patient safety by making sure that a patient isn't getting multiple prescriptions (potentially at different pharmacies, or different prescribers) that could interact with each other. Let's say you take Oxycodone 5mg three times daily chronically. You get in an accident and the emergency room prescribes you Norco (your hydro/APAP 5-325). The monitoring tool lets them know that you're already on an opioid and to either change therapy or verify the additional dose with your PCP.
Anyways I'm rambling. Long story short, you've got the least suspicious prescription. Nothing to worry about.
That poor boy on the left... That's just cruel
One of our systems at work don't let you use the past thirteen passwords! Plus monthly password changes. Guess who's got a generic password that has an ever increasing number at the end of it...
The cell is the cell of the cell