Drug Reference Library
Side effects, aftermath effects, nutrient depletions, drug and supplement interactions, and body support protocols for informed patient-provider conversation. This is educational information, not medical advice. All medication decisions — including any changes to dose or schedule — must be made with your prescribing physician.
This library does not include every drug. Entries are added on an ongoing basis — if you don't see what you're looking for, check back or reach out.
No one has ever had a pharmacology deficiency.
You can be deficient in magnesium, in sunlight, in sleep, in real food, in clean water, in meaningful connection. Every chronic disease has an underlying cause — and that cause is never a shortage of pharmaceuticals.
This library documents what each drug can do, what it can take from the body over time, and what questions to bring to your prescribing physician.
Educational awareness only — not medical advice. All medication decisions are directed by your prescribing physician.
Why This Library Exists
Studies published in the Journal of the American Medical Association — Starfield, 2000 — and the Journal of Patient Safety — James, 2013 — estimate that adverse drug events from correctly prescribed medications cause between 106,000 and 440,000 deaths per year in the United States. That places iatrogenic drug harm consistently among the top four leading causes of death in this country — alongside heart disease, cancer, and stroke.
Those numbers need to be read carefully. These are not overdoses. These are not errors. These are correctly prescribed medications, taken as directed, causing death at a scale we have collectively decided not to discuss.
That is the normalized end of the spectrum. Then there is the other end.
Drug mills — clinics run by physicians who prescribe controlled substances at high volume with minimal or no real medical oversight — turned Florida into the epicenter of the U.S. opioid crisis in the 2000s. Pill mills operated openly. Patients drove from other states to fill prescriptions. Before targeted enforcement began around 2010–2011, this was simply how it worked. Legislative crackdowns changed the geography. They did not change the pattern.
In 2025, federal prosecutors charged Dr. Sergei Margulian of Hallandale Beach with dispensing approximately 2.9 million oxycodone pills out of clinics in Broward and Miami-Dade counties between 2021 and 2024 — to patients he reportedly never examined. In Northwest Florida, Dr. Elaine Sharp of Gulf Breeze was arrested in October 2024 by FDLE for murder, manslaughter, and racketeering — a case that began after local pharmacists filed complaints about the volume of oxycodone she was prescribing. Pace Pharmacy in the Santa Rosa area — owners arrested in 2025, charged with trafficking over 22 kilograms of oxycodone and 26 kilograms of hydrocodone.
Between Starfield's numbers and these cases sits the full range of pharmaceutical harm — from the structural to the criminal. But the criminal cases are the edges. The center is the industry itself. Pharmaceutical drugs — correctly prescribed, taken as directed, fully legal — kill more Americans every year than gun violence, car accidents, and most infectious diseases combined. That is not a fringe claim. That is the peer-reviewed literature. The industry that produces this outcome is also the industry that funds medical education, underwrites clinical trials, and shapes prescribing guidelines. This library exists because that fact deserves to be named. Not to frighten you away from medication — some medications are necessary, some are lifesaving, and some people have no choice right now. To make sure that when you take it, you know exactly what you are taking, what it is depleting, what it is doing to your body over time, and what you can do to protect yourself while you need it.
Sources
Polypharmacy Tool
Case Analysis
Select a drug from the list to view its full profile.