My meds were more effective right after picking them up, turns out my apartment gets too hot.
Probably not a problem for everyone but it was a problem I was running into where my meds weren't being as effective towards the bottom of the bottle and then would work great after a refill.
My meds are supposed to be stored between 67F and 77F and my apartment has been routinely getting to around 85F for days (and weeks) at a time and by the time I was getting close to the bottom of the bottle it wasn't really working that well for me.
So I took one of those can fridges and added some temperature control to it to automatically keep it in the temperature range I need and also added a large bag of dessicant in there to keep the humidity low as those little can fridges suck up moisture something fierce.
So basically make sure your meds are stored properly or you'll probably have some additional issues that you really don't need.
How do you come to this conclusion? Because your medicine isn't "hitting" as hard as you'd expect?
There are many different scenarios that impact bioavailability etc. It seems unlikely that such a small temperature difference would have any noticeable impact on your medicine, especially during such a short time.
More probable than OP's opinion based purely from "how hard that shit hits bro".
Like, theres so many different reasons for OP's feelings rather than a couple degrees temperature difference. Even a slight difference in stomach pH would have a bigger impact on the bioavailability than any non-excessive variations in storage temperature would.
And let's say that even if that small amount of temperature has any real impact, it wouldn't be noticeable either unless OP's prescription is like a year's worth of product for each refill. But sure, love the echo chamber down votes, nothing wrong with believing OP's blind opinions... you're surely gonna notice a helluva difference when you're temperature controlling one of the most chemically stable medicines!
Yeah, just ignore that they stored it at 40 freedom temperatures, which is a lot outside the suggested storage range, and had no impact. So OP's +15F difference would most likely not be some game changer of a very stable chemical; many other factors have a much bigger effect on bioavailability, and that's what you should be focusing on instead.