Amazon has
144-Count Advil Dual-Action Back Pain Caplets (250mg Ibuprofen + 500mg Acetaminophen) on sale
2 for $16.35 when you follow the deal instructions below.
Shipping is free.
- Note: Must be logged in to clip coupons. Coupons are typically limited to one per account. You may cancel Subscribe & Save anytime after your order ships.
Thanks to Deal Hunter
Navy-Wife for sharing this deal.
Deal Instructions:
- Click here to go to the product page
- Under subscribe & save select quantity of 2
- 'Clip' the 25% off coupon on the product page
- Select any frequency and click set up now
- Proceed to checkout
- Final price should be $31.94 - $3.99 coupon savings - $10 multibuy discount - $1.60 Subscribe & Save savings = 2 for $16.35 + Shipping is free
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Top Comments
These are designed to metabolize safely and can be taken over longer periods of time than a typical generic acetaminophen or ibuprofen.
Taking separate medicines offers no guarantee that both will metabolize at the same rate, which often results in negative effects like stomach pain. Depending on the frequency of dosage, you could also end up overdosing if both medicines haven't run their course. Even when prescribed, there's a requirement of taking medicines with the same composition. For instance, you can't mix a rapid release gel tab with a standard tablet and expect them to fully overlap.
There's also a matter of convenience and safety in having both medicines in one bottle with correct labeling. You can create the same convenience by mixing pills into one bottle, but you lose out on the safety aspect.
I'm not saying you can't take two separate medicines responsibly and feel like you're getting the same effect, but with all the adverse effects it can have, you aren't any smarter for doing so.
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Why Amazon is listing the recommended adult dosage in the title is beyond me, but they aren't the only ones.
A single bottle of advil would last me well over a year so the savings aren't that big of a deal. It's the allergy medicine that I was really hoping to save on. And again. I found a spray that worked that had the same active ingredients of the 2 that didn't.
A single bottle of advil would last me well over a year so the savings aren't that big of a deal. It's the allergy medicine that I was really hoping to save on. And again. I found a spray that worked that had the same active ingredients of the 2 that didn't.
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This works much better, but it's only available on the shelf in the Great White North:
https://www.backrelief.
Methocarbamol is a prescription here.
This works much better, but it's only available on the shelf in the Great White North:
https://www.backrelief.
Methocarbamol is a prescription here.
These are designed to metabolize safely and can be taken over longer periods of time than a typical generic acetaminophen or ibuprofen.
Taking separate medicines offers no guarantee that both will metabolize at the same rate, which often results in negative effects like stomach pain. Depending on the frequency of dosage, you could also end up overdosing if both medicines haven't run their course. Even when prescribed, there's a requirement of taking medicines with the same composition. For instance, you can't mix a rapid release gel tab with a standard tablet and expect them to fully overlap.
There's also a matter of convenience and safety in having both medicines in one bottle with correct labeling. You can create the same convenience by mixing pills into one bottle, but you lose out on the safety aspect.
I'm not saying you can't take two separate medicines responsibly and feel like you're getting the same effect, but with all the adverse effects it can have, you aren't any smarter for doing so.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
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