Categorized under Anti-Allergic/Asthma

Flovent (Fluticasone Propionate)

Flovent (Fluticasone Propionate)


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WorldRxStore $27.35 - Flovent 50 mcg× 1 Nasal Spray $104.71 - Flovent 50 mcg× 6 Nasal Sprays

14/free

masterCard most countries
Tl-Pharmacy - - - - - - 10-21 days/free masterCard every country
MedRx-One - - - - -

10 days/free

masterCard most countries
LeadMedic $29.60 - 1 Nasal Spray x 50 mcg $113.33 - 6 Nasal Sprays x 50 mcg (+$83.73)

14-21days/$10
5-7 days/$25

masterCard every country
Pharma-Doc - - - - - FedEx next day/$24 masterCard USA only
Med-Pen - - - - -

14-20 days/$10
7-14 days/$20

masterCard most countries
OurPharmacyRx $21.00 - 1 inhaler x 25 mcg $97.20 - 6 inhalers x 25 mcg

14-21 days/$15
5-12 days/$30

masterCard most countries
RxPharms - - - - - -

14-24 days/free

worldwide
Mx-Pharma - - - - - -

8-16 days/$20
5-9 days/$30
3-6 days/$40

most countries


Flovent (Fluticasone Propionate)
ASTHMA IN CHILDREN: TREATMENT OF A SEVERE ATTACK
This is the time when asthma really hurts, when as parents you experience the pain and torment of seeing your own child suffering terribly in a desperate attempt to breathe. This is the time when an all-consuming panic can set in. You will be well aware that a certain number of children die every year from asthma, and suddenly you realize that your own son or daughter could be one of them. Surely it cannot be happening. Why can it not be like any other Sunday night? Why is it always at a time when the surgery is closed? You will feel desperately lonely and very frightened. ‘Why did I not listen to what the doctor told me and give the inhaler three times a day as advised? I daren’t ring again as I have already rung twice this week and it is a Sunday night.’
All these emotions and more will flash through your mind, and you will try to stay in control as you know that if you panic your child will sense this, and this can make the asthma worse. I know this is what happens as I have experienced these feelings myself with my own children. Perhaps as a doctor I should be better able to deal with the situation but I can assure you it is impossible for anyone to remain detached about their own family!
I remember on one occasion we had just returned from a holiday in Abersoch in Wales, and my son Ross had developed an attack of asthma in the car on the journey home. North Wales does not have that many hospitals, and anyway it wasn’t until the last half an hour that his condition deteriorated rapidly. I rang my own GP and she came over immediately. Ross by this time was worn out with the effort of breathing, and in the middle of his nebulizer treatment he actually slumped into a kind of exhausted sleep and the mouthpiece fell out of his mouth on to the floor. At that moment I glanced at the doctor and saw a look of terror in her eyes – I knew for an instant she thought he had died. Fortunately Ross jerked himself awake and carried on with the treatment but I vowed from that day on that I would always be available to parents if they were struggling with their child’s asthma. It was following that incident I opened an asthma clinic at my surgery, with no appointment needed, so anyone who wanted could come in at any time.
But what if it is at a weekend or when the surgery is closed? When should you call your doctor out? There are specific indications when to do this which I outline in more detail on p. 109. As a general rule you must always contact your GP if you are worried. Do not be concerned about contacting him or her unnecessarily. All doctors know that asthma is a potentially serious condition and that the sooner it is treated the better. Unfortunately there will always be the occasional doctor who will be a bit grumpy and might even infer that the visit was not needed. My advice to you if this happens is to immediately change your doctor to one who is more sympathetic. The vast majority will come out quite willingly even when it is in the middle of the night.
What does irritate doctors is to be called to see little Johnny at three in the morning when he has been ill for two weeks with a cold, or when the call has been left until one in the morning when the parents have returned after a night out!
*50/211/5*

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