Half a croissant, on a plate, with a sign in front of it saying '50c'
h a l f b a k e r y
"This may be bollocks, but it's lovely bollocks."

idea: add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random

meta: news, help, about, links, report a problem

account: browse anonymously, or get an account and write.

user:
pass:
register,


                                                                 

Alcohol - medicine pairings

Potentially leading to prescription gin and tonic etc.
  (+13, -1)(+13, -1)
(+13, -1)
  [vote for,
against]

The art and science of flavourology, drinks pairing and other such cobblers is well advanced enough that it should be possible to match alcoholic beverages to medically necessary prescription drugs.

When drugs are flavourless, water- or alcohol soluble, and don't adversely react to moderate alcohol intake, I see no reason why they should not be prescribed and delivered in any alcoholic drink of the patient's choice.

When the drug has a certain taste, or botanical or drug-related complications, then the boffins in the white coats swing into action, to work out what drink best matches the drug in question. Would the tart taste of the drug, and its fragile active ingredients, be best matched with a vintage champagne, a cheap cremant de Loire, or would it be better to look at fine Belgian weißbier?

Clearly extensive pre-clinical and clinical trials are required, and the bigger the control group the better.

pocmloc, Mar 06 2020

Please log in.
If you're not logged in, you can see what this page looks like, but you will not be able to add anything.
Short name, e.g., Bob's Coffee
Destination URL. E.g., https://www.coffee.com/
Description (displayed with the short name and URL.)






       // Clearly extensive pre-clinical and clinical trials are required, and the bigger the control group the better. //   

       We recommend a wide-ranging programme of post-launch monitoring to ensure that the results in practice (for a large sample) are consistent with any clinical and pilot studies.   

       Participants should of course be suitably remunerated for their time, effort and inconvenience.   

       [+]
8th of 7, Mar 06 2020
  

       I am genetically lucky - I am the side effects poster boy.   

       If only one in a hundred gets a given side effect, you can bet money I'll be that one.   

       I get a cough, itchy and confused just walking past a pharmacy (that's the chemist's for some of you).   

       So sign me up ... I'm looking forward to a steady supply of trial samples, and lots of reports to fill out.
normzone, Mar 06 2020
  

       Nice, I am sure the alcohol will prove advantageous with certain prescriptions. It is a good time to have a cough at work.
wjt, Mar 08 2020
  

       Brilliant. Simply brilliant. I wonder why it hasn't been done.
blissmiss, Mar 08 2020
  

       Because medics are sadists, and don't want their victims to derive any pleasure from being ill ?
8th of 7, Mar 08 2020
  

       I guess, other than the bad outcomes, most cases the alcohol wouldn't help so much as just muddy the water. Plus, there plenty of other relieving potions in the draw, each with their own iillings. Really, it's getting the time to combine the cocktails and find the really good ones. Or being pointed at by computer computation.   

       Probably not unlike finding weird food combinations.
wjt, Mar 10 2020
  

       Perhaps the logical solution is to allow barkeepers to dispense medications as well as drinks ?
8th of 7, Mar 10 2020
  

       It makes sense to me, as long as he's a pharmacist.
blissmiss, Mar 10 2020
  

       Maybe medical colleges could also issue alcohol trading licenses upon graduation. That way all certified pharmacists would be able to also trade as a pub, without needing any other qualifications. That would increase the chances of this idea becoming mainstream, as well as increasing the number of pubs.
pocmloc, Mar 10 2020
  

       ^Genius. You should post that.
8th of 7, Mar 10 2020
  

       I just did, right here! Did you not see it?
pocmloc, Mar 10 2020
  

       You should post it as an independent hb idea, not just as an annotation to this one.
8th of 7, Mar 10 2020
  

       But it's an integral part of this idea!   

       There is a philosophical question here about what is the definition of an idea, and whether a sub-idea deserves posting itself separately or whether it is best considered as an appendage to its superior idea.
pocmloc, Mar 10 2020
  

       //Maybe medical colleges could also issue alcohol trading licenses upon graduation//   

       The idea goes further with the thought that licenses issued have a hierarchy and lower ones are included as a matter of fact.   

       The other side of a license is, does a Doctor make a good bar tender?
wjt, Mar 12 2020
  

       Aren't medicines supposed to taste horrible to deter over dosing.
xenzag, Mar 12 2020
  

       // Aren't medicines supposed to taste horrible to deter over dosing. //   

       Which brings us to another issue: if you are served, say, medicinal cocktail #3, the Percocet rum and coke, what's to keep you from having several per sitting and ODing?
whatrock, Mar 12 2020
  

       [whatrock], that actually sounds pretty damn good right about now.
blissmiss, Mar 12 2020
  

       A benadryl crushed up into a shot of whiskey will certainly make you fall asleep pretty quickly.
nomocrow, Mar 12 2020
  

       // what's to keep you from having several per sitting? //   

       Cardiac arrest ?
8th of 7, Mar 12 2020
  

       Had to go down quite a few to find an idea here I didn't bun.   

       I'll buunnnnnn.... this one. [+]
doctorremulac3, Jan 02 2023
  

       ^^ a good choice. Have another Percocet rum and coke. We keep the bottle nearby.
whatrock, Mar 07 2023
  

       Nay, the sugar in the coke is not good for you on a regular basis, and the coke is hard on your stomach.   

       Now, anejo tequila and percocet, that's a different story.
normzone, Mar 10 2023
  

       In the US drugs are deliberately made more toxic to deter overdose: They add Tylenol to most opioids for this purpose. Thousands die every year because of this evil policy.
Voice, Mar 11 2023
  

       [Voice], I had never heard that Tylenol was added to opioids to make them more toxic. I thought that combination was for synergy, to make them work better than either on their own.
a1, Mar 11 2023
  

       It does that, but there's a reason it's impossible to buy many OTC medicines in the US without Tylenol coming with them.
Voice, Mar 11 2023
  

       // it's impossible to buy many OTC medicines in the US without Tylenol coming with them. //   

       I didn’t know that. Can you give an example of one where it has no therapeutic use? And for whatever condition you might buy that compound, there’s no alternative available that *doesn’t* have it?   

       // there’s a reason //   

       But is it an “evil” reason? It’s effective and (mostly) safe for mild pain and fever. Sometimes combined with other meds, for synergy. It IS toxic at high doses, and shouldn’t be paired with alcohol - and every med that contains it carries warnings to that effect. To give some validation to your concern though, there IS a problem with packing it in so many combos. If it’s in more than one thing you’re taking and you don’t read all the package warnings, you could easily take much.   

       Or is there a bigger evil you’re talking about though?
a1, Mar 11 2023
  

       Later I may have the time to list medicines for you but for now I'll leave that aside.

//is there a bigger evil//

Nope, just "let's stop people from abusing drugs by making drugs poisonous" More incompetence than evil, really. But Chairman Mao proved you can be both evil and incompetent and still kill more people through the latter. Come to think of it a lot of world leaders have proved that.
Voice, Mar 11 2023
  

       Oh, I can accept some of that - just not sure why you singled out Tylenol as an example. Don’t think it fits the profile, it’s a good painkiller and not very toxic compared to a lot of others. Probably more benign than aspirin.   

       But conceding your overall point, it’s hard (not impossible) to find straight DXM anymore. Great cough suppressant but high abuse potential. So most OTC preparations include stuff to make you vomit if you take enough to get tripping on it.
a1, Mar 11 2023
  

       An emetogenic I can understand, if not completely approve of. Live damage is a whole different animal.
Voice, Mar 12 2023
  

       I singled out Tylenol because it's so common, deadly in the doses people take to get high, and unnecessary to add.
Voice, Mar 12 2023
  

       Grape soda with codeine cough syrup is quite popular. AKA lean, purple drank, etc. There's established precedent.
tatterdemalion, Mar 13 2023
  

       //Clearly extensive pre-clinical and clinical trials are required, and the bigger the control group the better//   

       Historical note: in early 1800s Upper Canada, the Pharmacist would sell you alcohol, marijuana, opium, morphine, laudanum, cocaine, and heroin, to cure what ailed you and your children (the 'control group').   

       Every family had marginalia in a cookbook or notebook describing successful combinations; the family Bible records the results of unsuccessful recipes.
Sgt Teacup, Mar 26 2024
  


 

back: main index

business  computer  culture  fashion  food  halfbakery  home  other  product  public  science  sport  vehicle