I was hospitalized for schizoaffective disorder and given a high dose of liquid medication every night to knock me out. I can’t remember the name of it but I think it originated in Spain. Google isn’t helping me and probably now thinks I am trying to smuggle drugs into the US. Lol.
Don’t know about the Spain part, but midazolam is the most commonly used sedative in French ICUs per https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3751696/ .
Midazolam might have been called by the brand names Versed or Dormicum.
It was tercian! Just popped into my head
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyamemazine this definitely makes more sense than midazolam
no way that hospital would dispense benzo every day like this, more typical medication would be hydroxyzine or something similar - sedative antihistamine with some antipsychotic effect, or the other way around
Presumably there’s a record of the medication, given that someone had to pay for it.
Lol, European records aren’t about payment, but patient care. The records undoubtedly show what was taken but the financial records may not. The fee may have been a standard fee for medication or free. It might be different for a non resident receiving care too, but likely the internal records would be the same.
Le Drugs
Quetiapine, maybe?
It isn’t offered in the USA, only Europe
But weren’t you given it in France, which is in Europe? So based on the info you’ve given, it might be the answer to your question?
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How do you know that much about it? Are you sure the brand name wasn’t European? Brand names often differ between the US and Europe
I mixed up Portugal with Spain and it was actually created in France. My ex is a reputable french neuroscientist.
clozapine ? A quick search returned : Olanzapine, quétiapine, lithium, halopéridol, carbonate de lithium, aripiprazole, rispéridone, brexpiprazole, Asénapine, paliperidone, ziprasidone (en), lurasidone et clozapine