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Posts Tagged ‘drug addict’

Question by Sky: Why do some prescription drugs have some really adverse effects on people?
I just came out of kidney surgery yesterday for stones–twice this year alone–and the drugs I’m on have made me really jumpy, nervous, wiped out, and just too energetic for my tastes.

Why am I feeling like this? Is it because I don’t have the same tolerance to meds as some people do, or is it because I lack that “addiction” factor that sometimes pops up with blatant drug abuse?

Thanks.

(Yes, they put a stent in me.)

Best answer:

Answer by rick29148
Nothing is perfect, everything is a compromise. The drug(s) have a side affect, and your doctor has decided that the side affect is not bad enough to have you stop taking it. I has in a truck wreck 5-1/2 years ago, and there were some internal injuries. One of my daily meds is a super niacin pill for spleen damage. If I don’t take it with an asprin at the right time, it will make my skin turn red and try to crawl up my back….not terrible, but not my idea of a good time. Doc says it’s the only med available to keep the spleen producing the white blood cells I need, so, I take the pills. Ask your doc, maybe there is another med you can take that will do the same thing without the side affects… Good Luck.

Answer by Susan Yarrawonga
Prescription drugs are regarded as invasive alien substances by our bodies that reject them and the side effects are basically protests by our bodies.

Unfortunately, we sometimes or even often need prescription medication as it usually works much faster than natural medication which often fails to overcome the relevant medical problem. Natural medication sometimes helps a bit but often not enough so then you have to take prescription medication which is rarely without side effects.

CARE brings its program to combat drug abuse into Collin County
Barker has 14 years of experience working with families in private and educational settings for adolescent substance abuse and addiction. She earned a master's degree in family studies and human development from Texas Woman's University. Barker is a …
Read more on Dallas Morning News

Spiritual River Launches Infographic Advocating Drug Addiction Treatment
Spiritual River's informative infographic reveals surprising information about substance abuse and demands a “call to action” for struggling addicts to get clean. The infographic brings to awareness the percentage of people who have used and eventually …
Read more on Newsday

Racist attacker is now washing feet at treatment base
A FORMER drug addict who launched a racial attack has been washing the feet of a man from a minority group in a Nottingham treatment centre. A court heard that Stephen … He washed his feet as an act of voluntary service. These things have been done …
Read more on Nottingham Post

Editorial: Improved but Not Expanded; Mixed News on NH Medicaid
As part of the Affordable Care Act, the federal government has offered to pay the entire cost of expanding coverage to people who earn up to 138 percent of the poverty level — about $ 16,000 for a single adult — for the first three years, with the …
Read more on Valley News

Question by : How do I tell my parents that I didn’t pass any of my classes this semester?
For reference, I am a junior at a commuter college and decided to take all of my classes online this semester. The lack of structure and freedom was really, REALLY bad for a procrastinator like me, and I wasn’t self-disciplined enough to keep myself on track.
I feel horrible that I’ve let myself and my parents down, but I intend on finishing college and doing infinitely better next semester. How do I tell them all of this in a coherent way?

Best answer:

Answer by Pink
Just tell them

Answer by Bushy Biggons
You accidentally leave this web page open for them to see!
Seriously, that’d work better than anything else… Just make sure your display name is your real name so they don’t go ‘oh that bad kid’, I know my daughter/son would do better *sees results* WTF!!!! :@

That is all.

Help for mentally ill drug addicts
The B.C. government has released a plan to help some of the most difficult patients to support, those with both a mental illness and a severe drug addiction. Health Minister Terry Lake announced the $ 20 million program that includes a new psychiatric …
Read more on CBC.ca

Rob Ford: A drug consumer who supports prohibition
In 2005, Ford was a loud and vocal opponent of that Toronto Drug Strategy, which included a recommendation that the city support federal legislation to decriminalize possession of small amounts of cannabis for personal use. Ford, six years earlier, was …
Read more on Toronto Star

Support groups in the area can help with illness, drug problems and many other
NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS: Marion, Va., Survivors Group, Royal Oak Presbyterian Church, 139 W. Main St.; Sunday, open meeting, 8 p.m., open discussion; group meets regularly to help each other recover; open to those addicted to any form of drugs …
Read more on TriCities.com

1 in 6 unemployed are substance abusers
The trends for drug use have held relatively steady for a decade, even in spite of the recession. One would think that as millions of “clean” workers suddenly lost their jobs and joined the unemployment rolls, the rate of drug use among that group …
Read more on New Pittsburgh Courier

Lincoln drug treatment workers, police seeing more addiction woes
“Before the situation was that we would see an older group of people, probably more in their late 30s and 40s, that had mental health [and drug addiction] problems,” Greenleaf said Tuesday. “Now we are seeing people using drugs at a much younger age, …
Read more on Bangor Daily News

Greek drug addicts get high in the consumption room
A member of a medical team holds equipment provided to people who will shoot hard drugs in the consumption room, a room where addicts can shoot up under supervision, on Nov. 25 in Athens. One month ago Okana, a Greek organization funded by the …
Read more on USA TODAY


by IFRC

Among prescription painkillers, drug abusers prefer oxycodone
A nationwide survey of opioid drug abusers in rehab indicates that because of the high it produces, the prescription painkiller oxycodone is the most popular drug of choice. Hydrocodone, also prescribed to treat pain, is next in line. In all, some 75 …
Read more on Washington University in St. Louis News

With moratorium on opiate addiction drug, city invites broader discussion on
Some city councilors want that time to review the city's regulations on drug addiction treatment facilities and, if needed, pass new rules regarding buprenorphine treatment. Under state law, the moratorium could be extended an additional 180 days if …
Read more on Bangor Daily News

Question by Lauren Luxe: What is your opinion on medical marijuana?
Do you believe it is helpful or destructive? Do you think it is beneficial or dangerous? Do you think it helps solve more problems than it creatives? Do you think it actually destroys white matter in your brain? Do you believe that brain cells are not capable of producing more brain cells?

There are many different views on the issue regarding medical grade marijuana.
A lot of published online reports contain falsified information to persuade people in order to create this idea that may not necessarily be true.

In your opinion, what is the best way to legalize marijuana?

And on that topic, what do you think will happen to all the other “addicts” who wish to legalize their own “drug of choice.”

In the wise words of Bob Marley, “Smoke the herb and it reveals yourself to you.” Do you think that is true?

In the words written in some texts, people believe that every plant, every animal, every living thing, somebody saw all of the uses for them and saw that it was “GOOD.”

What is your stance on this argument?
Please include supporting information and trustworthy sources. Thank you.

Best answer:

Answer by Boiled Angel
I believe it’s helpful, I believe it’s beneficial, I think it will solve problems, and I do not believe it destroys brain matter and the brain is capable of producing more brain cells.

I think the best way to legalize it is to market it and tax it. It will generate so much profit that it will pay for some of our debt. We will also save money from having to convict those who are charged with crimes involving it. Putting someone in prison is expensive!

I do believe Bob Marley’s words are true. From my experience with the stuff, I have found out many things about myself that I wouldn’t have realized otherwise.

I’m not saying Marijuana is the best thing in the world that will solve all of our problems, I just think it’s ridiculous that it’s illegal. It makes no sense. Well, it actually does make sense because there are a lot of greedy rich bastards out there who would fall if it became legal.

Answer by Mrs. Eric Cartman
Looks like someone is doing a paper, haha. Visit cracked.com and read the arguments for and against pot. Do a search.

As for my opinion, I’m 100% for it. Prescription drugs are dangerous; pot is not. I’ve known two truly sick people who benefitted greatly from it. Cops never get called in for a domestic violence situation when it’s weed. It’s all drunks. Most of the dangerous stuff is legal. You can get it from ABC liquor or the doctor. Weed is harmless. If drugs were legal, it would destroy the illegal drug trade. The govt spends millions fighting the drug trade, and drugs are easier for minors to get than beer. People are dying over WEED. Going to jail over weed. The prison systems want to keep it illegal because they want money. They want to house people. It turns normal citizens into criminals and gets them in the system. It’s greedy and it’s irrational.

Editorial: A willful blindness?
While the Turning Point Center in Middlebury is one avenue to help those struggling with drug addictions, until recently there was no doctor providing medicines, like methadone or suboxone, in combination with therapy and drug support to help recovery …
Read more on Addison County Independent

Fighting Heroin Addiction in Montgomery County
… on a program that saved a young heroin addict's life and a. Darcy Spencer. News4's Darcy Spencer reports on a program that saved a young heroin addict's life and a parent whose son is struggling with addiction and believes much more needs to be …
Read more on NBC4 Washington