Tom: If the arthritis flares up, you should be able to take NSAIDS, but only for a day or two at a time. Personally, I take 81mg aspirin at night, and avoid larger doses of NSAIDS until I am REALLY in pain. True, you can't pop them like candy for any little ache and pain.
The NSAID thing is an issue for people on Warfarin.
I've said this before - there's another NSAID - Ketoprofen - that reportedly doesn't affect the platelets as much as other NSAIDs do. It should be considered a safer alternative to the other NSAIDs, but doesn't appear on drug formularies (which rate the drugs in tiers), so a needed dose can be very expensive. It would be great if the bean counters who formulate the pricing and tiering for medications make an exception for people on warfarin. It would be nice if the patent for ketoprofen expires, so we may be able to get it for pennies a pill - instead of dollars a pill.
The cost of self-testing isn't especially high. You'll need a meter, of course (if you're on Medicare, you should be able to have Medicare pay for one), and strips (about $5 per strip), and some kind of lancing devices (mine cost about a quarter each - single use, and automatic).
There are good resources on self management here -- check out Pellicle's links.
The only hitch in your self-management scenario is the Cardio. Charging you $30 a month is excessive -- your warfarin prescriptions can be written by your PCP or any physician or physician's assistant. Keep a spreadsheet of your testing and dosing to prove to your doctor that you know what you're doing and are able to self-manage; get blood draws to compare to your meter -- and this should prove to your doctor that you're on top of things. Once you can prove this to your doctor (not necessarily cardio), you should be able to get your warfarin prescribed.
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LoveMyBraveheart -- I drink very rarely. I'm wondering of Matthias is also taking medications that amplify the effects of alcohol. I haven't heard of warfarin - on its own - affecting the tolerance to alcohol.
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Buckeye -- I'm not sure how old the post that Tom quoted is, but I'm pretty sure that, by now, your fears of warfarin and INR management should be reduced considerably.
There are a lot of us here, and (although I can't speak for them) few have any problems with warfarin. It's not the problem that many myths paint it to be.