Rifater (Rifampin, Isoniazid, Pyrazinamide)
| Online Pharmacy: | Minimal Price: | Best Buy: | Shipping: | Payment | Delivery to: |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| medixresources | Not available for sale | 14/free | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | most countries | |
| tl-pharmacy | Not available for sale | 10-21 days/free | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | every country | |
| medrx-one | Not available for sale | 10 days/free | ![]() ![]() | most countries | |
| leadmedic "Isoniazid" | 300 mg | 14-21days/$10
5-7 days/$25 | ![]() ![]() | every country | |
| 60 pills $48.42 | 90 pills $61.81 | ||||
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All prices (expand / collapse)
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| Medph | Not available for sale | FedEx next day/$24 | ![]() ![]() ![]() | USA only | |
| med-pen | Not available for sale | 14-20 days/$10
7-14 days/$20 | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | most countries | |
| ourpharmacyrx | Not available for sale | 14-21 days/$15
5-12 days/$30 | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | most countries | |
| RxPharms | Not available for sale | 14-24 days/free | ![]() ![]() ![]() | worldwide | |
| RxMedShop | Not available for sale | 8-16 days/$20
5-9 days/$30 3-6 days/$40 | ![]() ![]() | most countries | |
Other names: Rifampicin
IMPLICATIONS FOR GETTING ALONG: MAKING EXACT DECISIONS
If you and a parent or children are embroiled in conflict, think about your trouble on a more academic plane. Is your problem due to clashing expectations or violations of any of these family rules? Pinpoint the source of your anger. Consider the situation from the other person’s perspective. Understand that having contrasting feelings is normal to being adult pioneers together.
Use the scientific distance offered by my rational analysis to help keep your ”meeting of the minds” from becoming a shouting match.
Approach differences with the idea that you are both right. Neither of you is giving too little or asking too much. It is the contradictions inherent in being adults together that are to blame. Work out a compromise between your needs with this idea in mind. Preserving your love is more important than “winning” any argument.
Remember, discomfort, anger, and resentment are common when the normal rules of giving and getting are breached and one person needs “too much.” What can you do if you are in this difficult situation? For instance, suppose your parent or child needs an unusual degree of help and you want to give, but in the most emotionally comfortable way?
Before you get involved, decide exactly what you can and cannot do. Write down the things you can comfortably do and those jobs that would be too much, including the time you can commit to helping plus the specific tasks you can manage well: “I would be able to visit Jane three times a week; I could shop and baby-sit while she looks for a job.” Then, in another column, list the requests you cannot fulfill: “I would feel resentful if I had to watch the children every day; it would be a real deprivation to lend her my car.” Do the most you can, but be clear about your limits. Resentfully doing more is likely to cause both you and the other person grief.
Try not to feel guilty about your limit, even if outsiders say your commitment is wrong. We all have different set points, different valid priorities in life.
Whereas we think the world will judge us only for doing too little, people surprisingly often are criticized for doing too much. For instance, children are frequently pressured by doctors, friends, and other relatives to send their parents to a nursing home, accused of being martyrs if they resist. But the actions others see as martyrdom may be emotionally just right for them. They would feel more uncomfortable not taking care of their flesh and blood themselves.
Kuypers and Bengston suggest that resentment is most likely when a commitment seems open ended. So it may help you to give with a freer heart and define your limits better if you know how long the person will need your help. If your relative is ill, make an appointment to discuss the situation with the doctor. “How is the illness likely to progress? What kind of help is needed now? What will be needed later on?”
My mother has liver cancer and may live only a year. I have been flying down to New York from my home in Boston to visit her every weekend. Since I work and have young children, I am exhausting myself, even though I want to be with her as much as I can. I thought I would give her every Saturday and Sunday. I’m changing my mind. I’ll go slower now and save my strength for the time she really needs me, so I can give her everything then.
If your relative is likely to need more and more as the months pass, pace your involvement now so you can be there when you are needed most. If the time frame of your help is undefined (Do you fly in to help your daughter with the new baby for a week or a month? How long can your daughter stay with you after her divorce?), set your own limit: “I can take a week off from work to help.” “She and the children can stay for a month.” Mentally define your limit before you board the plane or before she and the children move in.
*70/159/5*














