~Q~ wrote:
I agree, I think it is basically a "garage business" as well. Debbie basically is River Pharmacy and all of the other websites she sets up.
What do you mean by info?
Q
I'm inclined to think the same too, though it's only a feeling and I have no proof. And to be fair to the woman, she is as entitled as anyone to make a living. She has been helping people to get their hands on Naltrexone who otherwise may not have been able to get it. Also, if she is spreading the word about TSM, that's a good thing.
However, as I said in another thread, I don't like how she handled the queries about Nodict and I especially didn't like her proposing her own coaching site. It was pretty much an ad hominem response: the problem is not the medication, it's you, you need coaching... To the best of my knowledge she has no valid credentials in addiction. From her site:
Quote:
Deborah completed her M.S., Addiction Psychology and also has a performing arts degree in classical piano she received at the Royal Conservatory of Music Toronto, Canada.
What's an M.S. ? a masters? from where? why tell us that she has a performing arts degree from the RCM in Toronto, which is irrelevant, and not tell us where she studied Addiction Psychology, which is highly relevant? What credentials justify $ 1750 for basically TSM and information anyone can get for free on the net?
She was fairly insistent that Nodict is not time-release, and this may be true, but we only have her word for it, she didn't supply any proof or documentation supporting her claims.
By "info" I mean: the chemical composition of Nodict, for example, the patient information leaflet that usually comes in a box of medication. There is nothing about Nodict on the FDA site or anywhere other than online pharmacies' sites and the composition or content links lead to either nothing or to another brand of Nal. I may not be finding this info because I'm not looking in the right place.
Can someone scan and post the patient info here?
Curi