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General Parenting
can you make a teen difficult child take medication?
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<blockquote data-quote="ksm" data-source="post: 477369" data-attributes="member: 12511"><p>Good advice... I might try that later - but I think difficult child might have legitimate reasons about not wanting to take this rx. We will need to keep taking at least 1 pill a night for 3 more days if we end up stepping down off the medications. I will be calling their office in a few minutes. There has been twice in the last few days that right as she was waking up or falling asleep, she was speaking gibbbberish. Not mumbling, but combining parts or words or words that don't fit together and carrying on a conversation. Weird. She wasn't in a monotone or yawning, she was talking, with pauses and inflection of voice. and waiting for me to respond... but I didn't know what to say! Reminded me of my dad after he had had a stroke and the words were all jumbled or not the right word. KSM</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ksm, post: 477369, member: 12511"] Good advice... I might try that later - but I think difficult child might have legitimate reasons about not wanting to take this rx. We will need to keep taking at least 1 pill a night for 3 more days if we end up stepping down off the medications. I will be calling their office in a few minutes. There has been twice in the last few days that right as she was waking up or falling asleep, she was speaking gibbbberish. Not mumbling, but combining parts or words or words that don't fit together and carrying on a conversation. Weird. She wasn't in a monotone or yawning, she was talking, with pauses and inflection of voice. and waiting for me to respond... but I didn't know what to say! Reminded me of my dad after he had had a stroke and the words were all jumbled or not the right word. KSM [/QUOTE]
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can you make a teen difficult child take medication?
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