PippiLangstrumpf
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Hi, I'm flying to Turkey soon and would like to bring my Tirz with me. What's the best way to do that? Does anyone have any experience with this?
Really interested in this as am there in a weeks time and need to take a dose of RT but chat gpt says to not take it under any circumstances as if caught big fine or even prison !Hi, I'm flying to Turkey soon and would like to bring my Tirz with me. What's the best way to do that? Does anyone have any experience with this?
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Keywords: travel, flight, TSA, trip, airplane, holiday, vacation
I don't have a prescriptionYou can either take the vial and couple of syringes with you, or take a pen with enough in the cartridge to last you the trip.
For temperature control, they make small travel packs to keep either of the above cool for the transit. Then you put them in the fridge once you are at the hotel. The meds can last for 21 days at room temperature too (if it doesn't get too hot, that is).
TSA etc. are used to having people travel with their injectable meds. Maybe keep your prescription and labeled vial with you.
Watch "Midnight Express" 🙁I don't have a prescription
Turkey is no joke for drugs...Watch "Midnight Express" 🙁
Just label your vial injectable vitamin C and D. No prescription required and it’s a thing. If they take it, they take it. But no one’s going to jail for carrying injectable vitamins.I took 2 unreconstituded vials, Reta & Tirz and 2 3ml bac vials to Sardinia 6 weeks ago. I put everything (vials, syringes, swabs, ...) in my check-in luggage. No hassle whatsoever.
Turkey might be different or may be not.
Anyways, you are not taking cocaine or heroin over there. Worst thing that can happen is being detained until the tests come back. Tirz is not a classified narcotic, just a synthetic peptide. But being detained could prove to be an adventure or a nightmare, depending on your sense of adventure.
You can always get a prescription Mounjaro pen that you can take documented. That's the expensive but safe option.
The interweb says Rx is required for injectable vitamins in USA. Sadly. But maybe there's a comparable dodge.injectable vitamin C and D. No prescription required
Interesting. I know there are med spas that administer both C and D. I don’t remember my friends saying a RX was required. Even so what are they going to do? Probably just take the vials. Who cares.The interweb says Rx is required for injectable vitamins in USA. Sadly. But maybe there's a comparable dodge.
wow..med spas🤣
But yes, Turkiye Customs would probably confiscate only, at worst. I've found no evidence that they're stated official policy matches up with searches, questioning, etc. Especially for personal-use quantities. Diabetics have traveled with vials and syringes for years.
Turkiye has the most obesity of any European country, although most of their population lives in Asia where Gulf states and some Middle Eastern countries put them to shame for that.
I've wink/nod-informed my primary care physician that I take you-don't-want-to-know tirzepatide, and so it was added to the meds list (along with vitamins and supplements) which I can print out from the practice's web portal. That's probably what I'd do if I visit Turkiye, or transit through it on Turkish Air. And probably not declare anything at the green/red Customs exits.
I looked at mine and I think it would do the job of helping any Customs officer help me move along and get out of his face, if it ever came to that. But its details (no Rx number listed, document by vs approved by) differ from the in-house prescription meds listed. Fortunately it's intermixed with the latter, not broken out into a different section.wow..
print out meds list..
This is genius!!
No doubt it would not be 100% effective and may not help in this instance, but wow great idea.I looked at mine and I think it would do the job of helping any Customs officer help me move along and get out of his face, if it ever came to that. But its details (no Rx number listed, document by vs approved by) differ from the in-house prescription meds listed. Fortunately it's intermixed with the latter, not broken out into a different section.
And for anyone who has controlled substances, I'm sure the meds list wouldn't cut it.