Anybody traveled to Japan, Singapore and India with lyophilized powder?

Goonwise

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Hey I need to be traveling to Japan and Singapore for a business trip of short period(3 days in Japan and 3 in Singapore) and then eventually to India for around 20 days. I am planning to carry the lyophilized powder and BAC with me to India to reconstitute and then use it there. I am planning to carry the powder and BAC with me in a thermal controlled insulin bag in check in baggage. It would be close to 10-12 vials of various peptides(reta, bpc, tb500 etc)

Will this cause any issues? Anybody have done this before?
 
That's a lot of vials .. so results may vary.... But

Be prepared to have them either taken or loose your quick access passes if caught. Like TSA pre check or global pass. Unless you have a script by your physician.

You'd be better off turning them into pens and using that, written as insulin.


I had a friend bring Reta only in a pen with "insulin" written on the container. No issues.
 
There is no way I would take that much on a 6-day trip. I might recon my 2 of favorites and put those in the travel case. I'd first go to their customs websites and see exactly what the Rx labelling requirements are for both countries.

I've been to both countries several times. Japan probably won't care, but Singapore could confiscate them and ask a few pointed questions if their requirements aren't met, but it's still unlikely. They usually reserve caning for more serious crimes.
 
Hey I need to be traveling to Japan and Singapore for a business trip of short period(3 days in Japan and 3 in Singapore) and then eventually to India for around 20 days. I am planning to carry the lyophilized powder and BAC with me to India to reconstitute and then use it there. I am planning to carry the powder and BAC with me in a thermal controlled insulin bag in check in baggage. It would be close to 10-12 vials of various peptides(reta, bpc, tb500 etc)

Will this cause any issues? Anybody have done this before?

You may still have some suppression for at least two weeks. I was without GLPs for about a month and didn't gain any weight until at least week three.

Worse come to worse, liraglutide is a cheap generic in India for less than $30 a pen.
 
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There is no way I would take that much on a 6-day trip. I might recon my 2 of favorites and put those in the travel case. I'd first go to their customs websites and see exactly what the Rx labelling requirements are for both countries.

I've been to both countries several times. Japan probably won't care, but Singapore could confiscate them and ask a few pointed questions if their requirements aren't met, but it's still unlikely. They usually reserve caning for more serious crimes.
Okay. After seeing some replies here I am thinking of rescheduling my SG trip altogether. It seems risky.
 
Okay. After seeing some replies here I am thinking of rescheduling my SG trip altogether. It seems risky.
I really enjoy the city and would go again in a heartbeat, but if you absolutely have to take that many peps you open yourself up to questions, and they don't mess around.
 
There is no way I would take that much on a 6-day trip. I might recon my 2 of favorites and put those in the travel case. I'd first go to their customs websites and see exactly what the Rx labelling requirements are for both countries.

I've been to both countries several times. Japan probably won't care, but Singapore could confiscate them and ask a few pointed questions if their requirements aren't met, but it's still unlikely. They usually reserve caning for more serious crimes.
Good point, could likely be good with a few vials reconstituted claimed insulin supplies. Other than that I'd be out. Under a week I wouldn't even bother.
 
With or without GLPs, it may help to have Pepto-Bismol (bismuth subsalicylate) and Imodium (loperamide) on hand, at least for certain parts of India:

https://www.cdc.gov/yellow-book/hcp/preparing-international-travelers/travelers-diarrhea.html

Travelers' diarrhea (TD) is the most predictable travel-related illness. Attack rates range from 30% to 70% of travelers during a 2-week period.

Poor hygiene practices in local restaurants and underlying hygiene and sanitation infrastructure deficiencies are likely the largest contributors to the risk for TD.

Travelers should avoid ice unless they are reasonably certain it was made using safe water.

Not to mention spicy Indian food.
 
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With or without GLPs, it may help to have Pepto-Bismol (bismuth subsalicylate) and Imodium (loperamide) on hand, espeically in certain parts of India:



Not to mention spicy Indian food.
When my team goes to India, there is a list of vaccines they need to be up to date on, including all the routine ones (pre-Kennedy FDA), plus cholera, hepatitis A/B, and malaria prophylaxis drugs, which have to be started a few days before you leave.

Expect that you will pick up a stomach bug, so take Imodium and other meds that will support you. If it's only for a few days, you can pare that list down to what you think is most important to you, but the recommended list is fairy lengthy.
 
I had to look up Singapore's rules about travelers bringing in medication recently as my daughter was traveling there with a friends family, and she has ADHD. Their official rules are very strict, how strict they are in practice is another question, but caning is a used punishment there for drug offenses, so going there with a stack of peptides sounds a bit risky. Not using all or most of them for a short period of time sounds safer. I cannot think of any of them apart from the GLP's that would be an issue to stop for a while.
 
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