I Can’t Take Medication During Military Basic Training, But I’m on Finasteride! – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Quick Question:

I am joining the military, slighted to leave for boot camp in a few months. I JUST started taking finasteride about a week ago (experiencing lots of shedding, which I am fine with), but I am not allowed to ingest any medication for the duration of basic training, which lasts a minimum of 11 weeks.

Should I continue the treatment, knowing I have to stop? Will the shedding I have encountered even grow back without treatment? Will stopping, then starting again, effect future treatment (the drug’s potency)? Thank you in advance!

Block Quote

Army trainingI do not believe 11 weeks in and of itself should have a detrimental effect on your hair loss issue.

I have had patients in the military that didn’t have issues with taking Propecia during training, particularly since it is a medication prescribed by a doctor. Even in boot camp I believe it would be against the law for the government to flat-out keep you from taking a physician-prescribed medication. Now if you are taking Propecia obtained from the Internet without a valid doctor’s prescription that would be another issue entirely.

About.com has more on taking prescription medication in basic training — “Over-the-counter medication is not allowed in basic training. If you bring any with you, it will be taken away. All prescription medication will be re-evaluated by a military doctor upon arrival. If the doctor determines that the prescription is necessary, the civilian medication will be taken away, and the recruit will be re-issued the medication by the military pharmacy.

So I guess it depends on what the military doctor believes is a necessary prescription. Since it is a cosmetic issue, there might be some resistance… but perhaps you should talk to your recruiter about meeting with a military doctor ahead of time to find out for sure.

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