If an underwriter flags something on your paramedical exam, they can use an APS to determine if it's a medical condition or, for example,
a temporary side effect of a medication.
An APS, along with a prescription check (more on that in a minute) can let an underwriter know that the high blood pressure is
a temporary side effect of medication you're taking and not necessarily indicative of a larger problem.
Not exact matches
I encourage you to read the entire article and take note
of the following: the
side -
effects seen with
medications over the years and the fact that doctors «don't know the consequences and potential
side effects of taking tiny doses
of ketamine over and over again»; «she tried nearly everything» (you'll read this in all the articles advocating for ketamine but unfortunately they are only referring to
medications); the ketamine
effects are
temporary and cost $ 15,000 per year (and are not covered by insurance); and ketamine «is thought to stimulate an opioid receptor in the brain» and is already known to be addictive.
Just like the other adverse
side effects of this
medication, this one is normally
temporary.
Side effects of the drug include sedation, which is usually
temporary during the first one to two weeks
of medication use and wanes as the patient's body adjusts.