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Misc. Items for Sale... open to offers


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4 x White Side Plates plus 1 x Royal Doulton Regency White Fine Porcelain Dinner

[The sides plates are in perfect condition - the dinner plate has a slight chip on the edge] - ?2


1 x Jamie Oliver Flavour Shaker Cool Blue - never been used - ?8


1 x Habitat Bobby Clamp Lamp - brushed metal in a smart silver finish and a clamp mechanism. Size H42, W15, D24cm.

(bulb required = 1 x 8W E14 golf ball - not included). ?15



For a few more items visit my earlier posts here:

https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/forum/read.php?9,2214361,2214361#msg-2214361

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    • Hi, Anyone getting rid of any of these items? Also looking for a dish for air fryer - max 15 x 15cm. Or one person size dish that can go in airfryer or microwave. Thanks.            
    • Noted. I wasn't quite sure from their material whether the 'ad lib' supply by pharmacists had to be mandated; hence the suggestion to check.  There are plenty of individual manufacturers of generic methylphenidate, probably quite a bit cheaper too.  I'm afraid I didn't see radnrach's "can't really take an alternative", so apologies for presuming otherwise.  For myself I'm generally willing to trust that any manufacturer's offering of, say, 27 mg methylphenidate hydrochloride tabs, would contain that, and I'm not too worried about the minor quirks of things like their slow-release technology. I think it's likely that the medicines Serious Shortage Protocol does definitely give pharmacists some degrees of freedom. But it's apparently not in operation here. See the Minister's recent reply to a written question: https://questions-statements.parliament.uk/written-questions/detail/2023-11-13/1660#.   , which seems to approximate to: we can't apply the shortage protocol here because the drugs are in short supply.
    • I'm not sure pharmacists have any discretion to alter specific medication prescriptions, although they can choose supplier where a generic is prescribed which may be offered by more than one company. This will only be for older medicines which are effectively 'out of copyright' . They can't issue alternatives on their own authority as they don't know what counter-indications there may be for specific patients. GPs may prescribe a specific supplier of a generic medicine where, for instance, they know patients have an adverse reaction to e.g. the medicine casings, so the Nottinghamshire directive to specify only generics where available may not always be helpful. 
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