yes some healthcare systems act like insurance Co's because they answer to them/practically ran by them and about the managing costs i'm sure thats one sided....if a patient wants to be on androgel they'd prolly be all for it
yes some healthcare systems act like insurance Co's because they answer to them/practically ran by them and about the managing costs i'm sure thats one sided....if a patient wants to be on androgel they'd prolly be all for it
do you mean they would be in favor of androgel because it is not an injection? I understand what you mean, but to me, that doesn't make any sense. the first thing that came out of my GP's mouth was the patch. Anyways, the point is moot for me at the moment, since I got an extension on my test. he said he won't guarantee this is "indefinate", but once you go past the point of no return (when exactly is that, anyways?) and your test production shuts down, I don't know how they could deny continuing TRT anyways?
i meant because of the high cost to the patient
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