And the mess
age is… “lock up your drugs”
Drew Pinsky talks on the View and would like parents to lock up their drugs. It’s a small start. Listen to Dr. Drew discuss the abuse of Rx pain killers as an “Epidemic”
On fire about the impact of addiction and need for solutions
age is… “lock up your drugs” Drew Pinsky talks on the View and would like parents to lock up their drugs. It’s a small start. Listen to Dr. Drew discuss the abuse of Rx pain killers as an “Epidemic”
Dadonfire inte
rview, PRE-RECORDED!– AVAILABLE for (1) week following Wednesday, Mar. 31st, on Take12Radio.com. It is then archived on their website. Log in and listen. Topics include the background of the website, the elusiveness of sobriety, reaching the un-reachable, collateral damage to family and the bigger picture. Check it out.
http://www.dadonfire.net hits a milestone 10,000 mark in viewership today, thanks to you!Since July of 2009, this website blog has had one purpose as a community service: education and solutions in the world of addiction and recovery. Thanks for viewing the site and spreading the message, exposing the issues and sharing your stories and possibilities. Recovery is possible.
Victory Recovery!
♦ Every Thursday @ 2561 W. Ruthrauff Road, in Tucson, a suffering addict can show up for dinner @ 6:15 PM followed by a large group meeting @ 7PM and by a 12 step or focused group meeting from 8Pm to 9Pm. Childcare avail. The evenings final focus of work is outlined in their focus program
This Woodstock
rock star is a rock star in the intervention world too! Check out Dallas Taylor’s 25 plus year resume of recovery, counseling and intervention services @ www.taylorinterventions.com. Also! read about some interesting cultural history as Dallas chronicles of his own addiction and road to recovery in “Prisoner of Woodstock”. …”Intervention is a true expression of love and, if done correctly, can truly honor the loved one, who by this point must be feeling a great deal of pain and loneliness.” Dallas Taylor …Treatment resources: TREATMENT LOCATOR
Some insurance companies may cover substance abuse treatment. The vast majority will provide far too little help for their insured addicts. That is a hard reality for addicts to face. It is one reason among many others, that reform and public acceptance of treatment is needed. Here is a look at common discrimination practiced by the insurance industry as it is related to treatment for drug addiction. View it in an HBO.com piece entitled “Can’t Get Treatment Through Your Health Insurance Plan”. Also check out the rest of HBO.com’s film series on addiction. The website CHOOSE HELP goes on to talk about affordability and other options for treatment.
The Media Awareness Project – Drug News Archives link by Mary S.
I respect his attempts to get clean. Corey died March 10th. There is a long list of celebrities who have been beaten by addiction and it’s mostly opiate based prescription drugs and heroin that are doing the killing. An issue relating more to the disease of addiction than Corey, is generating a lot of hot questions about a big problem. Celebrity addicts underscore the deadly threat “legal prescription opiates” have on young people. Attention is fa
lling on the plague of doctor shopping, the prescription drug black market and a massive prescription drug ring. So Corey’s death, brings attention to a problem that in part is the 4th largest cause of death now. links by Mary S. and dadonfire.
Premieres March 17 @10/9c. Its called Addicted. link contribution by Mary S.
Dadonfire is looking at all sides of the issue in this rather interesting you tube video. “Six Groups Who Benefit from Drug Prohibition”
Drug demand is not just a problem with street dealers. As pain clinics compete for your Rx needs; (3) are under fire for feeding a Florida black market of narcotics, stretching half way across the U.S. Read Cracking Down on South Florida Pill Mills and Federal, Local Agents Raid 3 Palm Beach County Pain Clinics. Listen to LIVE online radio Sunday @ 9-11PM, EST Prescription Addiction Radio . Larry Golbom and Tom Kertscher of the Journal Sentinel discuss the deadly impact of legal drugs. Credits: News links by JJB ♦ Ad links by Keith
Who best to talk about the drug war than, Oliver North.
Made famous in the Iran-Contra scandal, he knows drug trafficking, albeit “contra”versial. North faults Obama’s efforts for not fighting the war head-on as the Obama Administration coordinates efforts with Mexico taking on the drug war, less directly. While, Mexican citizens deal with violence, U.S. citizens deal with addiction, fueling demand. Sen. Jim Webb’s efforts is a proposal that seeks to reduce demand through widespread treatment starting in our jails. America’s addiction to heroin, methamphetamines and marijuana is fueling this war. Reducing drug demand is a beneficial place to start. links by M. Slivinski
If you
haven’t heard, National Geographic is presenting a TV series every Monday called Border Wars. The series provides a little insight into the drug and human trafficking across our southern border.
From CNN via VBS.TV: “…it was Thatcher who signed off on a program that meant heroin addicts would be given access to free, sterile needles …after she’d closed down the mines, docks, and factories. …unemployment and heroin addiction have always made fine bedfellows. See the rest of the video @ vbs.tv
Crackonomics
collects opinions on US drug policy that may interest you to know. I also found a youtube video by Crackonomics call Unintended Consequences. An effort initiated by Senator Jim Webb is a realistic chance at substantively improving drug and prison policy through legislation. The National Criminal Justice Commission Act of 2009 will finalize important recommendations this year, which means we need to keep up the pressure for sane drug policy by contacting our lawmakers.
This Sunday, 9-11 PM EST, Prescription Addiction Radio Show talks about topics in the world of addiction and recovery. Dadonfire airs approx. 9:30EST to update on the website. Go to The Prescription Addiction Radio.com Click on WGUL860 AM and go to Sunday Schedule to listen.
In “Pain Clinic Legal Dope House?”, CNN’s Campbell Brown exposes a flourishing practice of licensed Florida “Pain” Doctors supplying drug addicts and drug pushers with legal prescriptions of dangerous narcotic drugs like oxycontin. Granted some are legit; but 50 million Americans (one in 5) have abused pain meds. New laws are expected to take up to 2 years to effect this practice.
“When Painkillers Become Dangerous” was written in 2004 and published by Hazelden. This book is worth a fresh look. It is an exceptional resource on drugs, addiction and recovery. Drew Pinskey (Doctor Drew), the lead author provides one of the clearest explanations of how addiction develops that I have read. He partners with five other very noteworthy authors. Marvin Seppala dissects treatment and recovery. Robert Meyers and John Gardin explain intervention, the prolific William White presents a historical overview of all drugs and their particular addictive characteristics while Stephanie Brown relates the insidiousness of addiction as a family problem. Anyone looking for a resource written by top experts in clear language will benefit from reading this.
Joseph A. Califano, departing chairman of The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse responds to Obamas state of the union address in his own 2010 address on cost issues and real problems. View his speech HERE
Vancouver: ‘Drug Central’ of North America is notable take on drug presence at the site of the Winter Olympics. Check it out. Also check out Stephen Bamber’s site Art of Life Itself which featured this BBC piece.
“Known as “Methadone hydrochloride,” Methadone is a narcotic pain reliever, analgesic used to treat moderate to severe pain with people who have not responded to pain relievers. Its main uses also include being given to patients who are battling narcotic addiction or in maintenance treatment of narcotic drug addiction…” Article by Jesse Herman of drugwatch.com – see article HERE
Psych Central is the Internet’s largest and oldest independent mental health social network. It made Time Magazine’s top 50 websites. It is run by MH professionals, offering sound information and over 150 support groups to nearly 1 million people around the world every month. You can find information on dual diagnosis, addictions, depression and subjects like suicide which like a tragic drug overdose death can leave loved ones stunned and feeling blame ♦ e-How site offers info on addiction and related topics, including a video library. Links by Mary S.
“Once in a blue moon, I read a book that culminates in a poignancy by sharing a powerful experience. Tales of Addiction is one such book: Here is a story and message amidst all of our stories; here is hope set against great challenges in the world of addiction and recovery; here is a legacy of understanding. Tales of Addiction is not just a collection of deep insight and personal accounts of tearful relapse and recovery, it is craftsmanship. Author, Barbara Sinor is a well read specialist in a world coming to grips with the disease of addiction. She offers her own valuable background of relatedness and heartened familiarity. Artfully sharing all of this is the book’s strength. Like a tapestry, it works by holding the reader’s interest with unique tales smoothly interwoven with both a spiritual and intellectual thought process. Sinor progressively weaves the details of her life and practical wisdom in-and-out of the book’s logical succession and its acumen of the disease of addiction. The reader feels her deep and intelligent reflection accompanying each precious contribution of struggle and uncertain recovery. Some make it; others may not, you begin to know this. You feel your own relatedness and in the last chapters, the reader enters the author’s space hearing the breaking news of a sudden culmination of one very special story and a legacy that lives on in her. Sinor’s book pushes forward with exigency and hope.
Tales of Addiction resonates a message to all impacted by the world of drugs and alcohol: It is a world of possibility and joy; it is a world of shocking sadness; it is a world of conquest. One poignant message from the book is that no matter what, a single addict’s life is still sacred and knowing this captures a moment in time. Sinor invites the reader to share in her well of knowledge, reputation and work in the field of addiction and recovery. She expresses touching wisdom gained from her own life experience while delivering generous individual contributions written by people like you and I. Tales of Addiction instills there is no right or wrong; there is the possibility of helping just one more person; there is the possibility of coming to terms with this single moment, just for today.” Bill Ford, http://www.dadonfire.net
Obama Administration Issues Rules Requiring Parity In treatment of mental, substance use disorders (SUD/MH), implementing the 2008 Wellstone-Domenici Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008. On a scale of 1-10 on how much more treatment this makes available; a 2 or 3 would be generous, because it simply doesnt require SUD/MH coverage . It addresses limits of covered benefits. It doesn’t count if your not in a large group plan. Insurance companies can still exclude SUD/MH treatment. See links… Going in the right direction; but falling short. Check out the above link. Post by Mary S.
Before Walter Cronkite passed he wrote about the war on drugs in the Huffington Post: Telling the Truth About the War On Drugs. He also aired a great television series on the drug war a little over a decade ago. If you never saw it; HERE IT IS.
Tales of Addiction “…gut-wrenching yet heart-warming narratives by people with long-standing addiction issues. Weaving the unedited stories into a theme of upliftment and hope are Dr. Sinor’s astute commentaries and observations….riveting…” Your can read the rest of her comments on this book scheduled to be published in 12 weeks from now on Dr. Sinor’s Blog and in this download PDF review
Addiction, Whats really Going On Many know the ins
anity of the addiction. This book published in 2009 looks inside a heroin treatment program. It addresses the important questions. …”It helps us understand the need for a “wake-up” call regarding drug and alcohol use … It declares a passion for client advocacy and discovering ways to deal with those addicted … It brings the reality of addiction out-of-the-closet…. Read it.
YOUR COMMENTS