Welcome to Drug Addiction Answers!

This Drug Addiction Answers site has been created by Drug Rehab That Works to provide real answers to the often difficult questions about drug addiction and rehab. We will be regularly posting articles about drug addiction and approaches to treatment.

 

 

Opiate use on the rise in Military

August 18th, 2010  |  Published in General

A recent report from the Army General indicates that there is an increased amount of soldiers on prescription medication and this may be fueling the growing rate of suicides in the military. Currently, 14% of the military is being prescribed prescription pain medication. Additionally, between 3 and 6% of all deployed military are on at least one antidepressant, and some soldiers are on multiple psychiatric medications. These statistics are fuel for many different heated arguments regarding the military and the war, however for a great number of the soldiers put on prescriptions, many of them return home addicted.

Often times, and especially in the military, prescription drug abuse starts with an injury. The medication is prescribed to allow the person to continue on with their life, without being sidelined with pain. However, what tends to happen is that the person becomes addicted to the medication and cannot refrain from using it. Even after the pain is gone, people still seek out the drug.

Regardless of how a person starts abusing prescription medication, it is vital that they enlist the help of an effective drug rehab to learn how to live life. More and more people are realizing that prescription drug abuse is a nation-wide epidemic, because of this, there is an increased focus on effective drug rehabs. The key to determining whether or not a rehab is effective or not is to look at their approach to addiction.

One rehab with one of the highest success rates for permanent sobriety (76%) attributes their success to their non-disease approach towards addiction. , Narconon , acknowledges that a large majority of people who are abusing prescription pain medication started off with an injury.

Armed with this knowledge, Narconon works one on one with their clients to figure out what problem or problems led to addiction in the first place. Once this problem is isolated and handled, clients no longer feel the need to abuse medications like OxyContin, Vicodin, or Percocet.

Additionally, using the same detoxification method that the police force in Utah uses to purify their bodies after dealing with toxic meth lab cleanups, clients enrolled in the Narconon program sign up for several sessions in a dry-heat sauna. The sauna, combined with light exercise and a regimen of vitamins and nutrition, allows the drug metabolites to dislodge from the system and escape through the sweat glands. These drug metabolites are the reasons for cravings, so this method of detoxification allows the person to live life without the constant threat of cravings, which is one of the biggest reasons why people relapse in the first place.

Our soldiers, our loved ones, and friends do not have to live life addicted to prescriptions. Prescription drug abuse does not have to go unhandled. If you or anyone you know is in need of help for a substance abuse problem, please contact Narconon at 800-785-4962 for more information.

The addict and his environment

July 22nd, 2010  |  Published in General

In their normal environment, drug addicts are surrounded by triggers and temptations to continue to do drugs. It is important that the drug addict be removed from that environment in order to better achieve success in beating the habit. A neutral territory (a rehab center) is the perfect place for the addict to not only become drug-free, but learn to stay that way. They are away from all of the things that trigger their need/want for drugs.

Stress is very often a trigger for drug addicts, whether real or imagined. In a rehab center, the stress factors are removed. They are in a safe, controlled environment. They have no access to their drugs or friends who use drugs. They are there 24 hours a day. There are out-patient programs, but they are far less successful than in-patient or residential centers. A drug addict must be removed from their regular environment until they are ready to go back to it.

Addiction is multi-faceted so the treatment has to be as well. While in rehab, they learn what their triggers are. They also learn how to avoid the situations and people which may contribute to their drug use. Where before, their entire lives were about getting and using drugs; now their lives are about ridding drugs from their bodies and lives.

Residential and in-patient treatment is proven effective. Cognitive -Holistic, 24 hour submersion in ridding the body, mind and soul of drugs and learning to live a healthier, happier life is preferable to a half-minded attempt in out-patient. A drug addict trying to become drug-free needs all available opportunities. Residential programs offer these opportunities and more. Being away from the environment in which the addiction started is essential in learning to beat the addiction.

Narconon offers a long term
residential drug rehab program Narconon is a drug & alcohol rehab center which offers a very successful cognitive- holistic rehabilitation program located away from the addict’s usual environment. Our rehab centers have been effectively helping individuals throughout the USA and Canada since 1966 .

Black Tar increases in popularity

July 21st, 2010  |  Published in General

Mexican drug smugglers are increasingly peddling a form of ultra-potent heroin that sells for as little as $10 a bag and is so pure it can kill unsuspecting users instantly, sometimes before they even remove the syringe from their veins.

An Associated Press review of drug overdose data shows that so-called “black tar” heroin – named for its dark, gooey consistency – and other forms of the drug are contributing to a spike in overdose deaths across the nation and attracting a new generation of users who are caught off guard by its potency.

“We found people who snorted it lying face-down with the straw lying next to them,” said Patrick O’Neil, coroner in suburban Chicago’s Will County, where annual heroin deaths have nearly tripled – from 10 to 29 – since 2006. “It’s so potent that we occasionally find the needle in the arm at the death scene.”
Authorities are concerned that the potency and price of the heroin from Mexico and Colombia could widen the drug’s appeal, just as crack did for cocaine decades ago.
The Latin American heroin comes in the form of black tar or brown powder, and it has proven especially popular in rural and suburban areas.
Originally associated with rock stars, hippies and inner-city junkies, heroin in the 1970s was usually smuggled from Asia and the Middle East and was around 5 percent pure. The rest was “filler” such as sugar, starch, powdered milk, even brick dust. The low potency meant that many users injected the drug to maximize the effect.
But in recent years, Mexican drug dealers have improved the way they process poppies, the brightly colored flowers supplied by drug farmers that provide the raw ingredients for heroin, opium and painkillers such as morphine. Purity levels have increased, and prices have fallen.
Federal agents now commonly find heroin that is 50 percent pure and sometimes as much as 80 percent pure.
The greater potency allows more heroin users to snort the drug or smoke it and still achieve a sustained high – an attractive alternative for teenagers and suburbanites who don’t want the HIV risk or the track marks on their arms that come with repeated injections.
“That has opened up heroin to a whole different group of users,” said Harry Sommers, the agent in charge of the Drug Enforcement Agency office in St. Louis.
Among the drug’s casualties was William Henderson, a 29-year-old welder from rural Missouri who died in his sleep in 2009, hours after snorting heroin. A bear of a man at 6-foot-1 and 300 pounds, he had tried the drug only a few times.
His wife recalled waking up to find the alarm buzzing. Her husband’s body had turned blue, and his stomach was cold to the touch.
“I kept telling him, Will, you’re late – get up!” said Amanda Henderson of Winfield, Mo., northwest of St. Louis. “But he wasn’t moving, wasn’t breathing. I called 911, but I knew it was too late.” She and her three small boys were left destitute.
An increasing amount of the deadliest heroin appears to be coming from Mexico. Although the vast majority still arrives from overseas, Mexican dealers appear to be chipping away at the U.S. market.
As recently as two years ago, state and federal drug agents saw heroin arriving from Colombia, Asia and Mexico. But as the availability and quality of cocaine and methamphetamine have declined, Mexican smugglers have stepped up heroin shipments to the U.S.
Independent Mexican smugglers have the market largely to themselves because the major drug cartels only dabble in heroin, preferring to focus on locally grown marijuana and Colombian cocaine, according to a DEA official in El Paso, Texas. The agent spoke on the condition of anonymity, citing security concerns and his ongoing role in active drug investigations.
Heroin metabolizes in the body so quickly that medical examiners often cannot pinpoint the drug as a cause of death unless there is other evidence to back it up – say, a needle or a syringe found near the body. Also, many victims use multiple drugs and alcohol, so citing a specific substance is often impossible.
At the start of the decade, roughly 2,000 people a year died from heroin overdoses nationwide, according to records kept by the Centers for Disease Control. By 2008, the drug was blamed for at least 3,000 deaths in the 36 states that responded to records requests from the AP. Deaths from 2009 have not yet been compiled.
The AP contacted agencies in all 50 states, as well as officials in the District of Columbia and New York City, including medical examiners, coroners and health departments. The survey showed that heroin deaths rose 18.2 percent from 2007 to 2008, and 20.3 percent from 2006 to 2008.
Law enforcement officials and drug-treatment experts believe those statistics woefully undercount the actual number of deaths. And they fear the problem is getting worse: Seizures of heroin along the U.S.-Mexico border quadrupled from 2008 to 2009, from about 44 pounds (20 kilograms) to more than 190 pounds (86 kilograms).
In the Minneapolis-St. Paul area, more than 20 deaths were blamed on heroin in 2009. DEA analysis of heroin purchased undercover found the drug was nearly 60 percent pure – the highest average purity in the U.S. At the same time, the price was among the lowest.
“This is consistent with how crack cocaine was introduced in the 1970s, when it was a high-purity product sold at a low price,” said Carol Falkowski, director of the alcohol and drug abuse division for the Minnesota Department of Human Services.

To hook new users, dealers are selling heroin cheap – often around $10 a bag. The new users included Billy Roberts, the 19-year-old son of a retired Chicago police officer. Last September, he slumped over dead of a heroin overdose at a friend’s house.

John Roberts had moved his family to Will County when Billy was just entering high school.
“I thought I was moving away from problems like that,” Roberts said. “These kids out here are being introduced to real serious drugs, dirt cheap, and they don’t know how pure and dangerous they are.”

Roberts now speaks to high school and civic groups about the dangers of heroin.
Independent Mexican smugglers like Jose Antonio Medina Arreguin pay the cartels for access to lucrative trade routes used to sneak drugs across the border and along U.S. highways.

Medina, also known as “Don Pepe,” was arrested earlier this year in Mexico on suspicion of running a $10 million-a-month heroin smuggling business from the western Mexico state of Michoacan. With the permission of the area’s powerful La Familia cartel, he is believed to have shipped as much as 440 pounds a month into the U.S. for street sales from San Diego to San Jose.

Glendale, Calif., often ranks among the safest cities of its size. But police are concerned about a growing heroin problem tied to Mexican street gangs from nearby Los Angeles. Gang members make the quick drive up Interstate 5 to deliver heroin straight to high school kids.
“They tell them, Just smoke it. It’s just like smoking a cigarette. It’s just like smoking marijuana,’ ” said Glendale police Sgt. Tom Lorenz. Once the kids are hooked, “they’ve got a customer forever.”

The trip up I-5 also leads to Oregon, where state Medical Examiner Karen Gunson said the heroin problem is worst in communities along the interstate. The state had 131 heroin-related overdose deaths last year – 42 more than three years earlier.
The dead simply didn’t know the risks of the heroin they used, she said.

“We’re seeing it sometimes 80 percent pure,” Gunson said. “There’s no FDA approval on this stuff”. If you’re using it every day, your chances grow and grow that it’s going to kill you.”

That’s what happened to Nikki Tayon. A decade ago, she helped lead the high school softball team from Winfield to second place in the state. But it wasn’t long after high school that she began using drugs such as marijuana and meth. A couple of years ago, she turned to heroin.
Last April, her mother, Sue Tayon, got a call from a ranger at Cuivre River State Park.

Nikki’s purse and cell phone had been found, and rangers were looking for her. Hours later came the gruesome news: Nikki’s body was discovered in a ditch. She was 28.
She had overdosed on heroin that was 90 percent pure, her mother said. Police said her boyfriend panicked and dumped Nikki from the car. No charges were filed.
“I know she was doing it,” Sue Tayon said. “But she didn’t deserve to die this way.”

War on Drugs Fails

July 21st, 2010  |  Published in General

For decades we have been flooded with pictures of beaming law enforcement standing next to piles of seized drugs, “Just say no to drugs” campaigns, DARE programs, statistics and battle cries – all in an attempt to drive home the necessity of the War on Drugs. This war that has claimed millions of lives (both due to the excessive and continued violence and the drug overdose deaths) has never really had a chance. Has the United States’ stand on drugs actually created more harm than good? Some people are starting to think so. Instead of allowing the violence and continued drug abuse to go on it is time we switched our focus to effective drug rehabs and drug education. We need to make drug use less of a game of cops and robbers and more of health crisis and issue. It is time to de-glamorize drug addiction.

Anyone who has witnessed drug addiction first hand understands that addicts lead a life of pain, sorrow, loneliness, and isolation sometimes ending in death and sometimes (if they’re lucky) they come out the other side a changed person. While there are significant, life-changing experiences to be had in drug and alcohol rehab, not everyone gets that chance. Some people are sent to jail, some people die before they can be helped and some people just continue to abuse drugs and/or alcohol. For those who have been able to attain success from drug rehab they will attest that nothing feels better than being able to live life the way it was intended. It is that type of success that we need to push. It is that type of mentality that we, as a country, need to have in order to finally stop the destruction and chaos that the illegal drug trade brings about.

There are thousands of rehabilitation facilities around the country that will help struggling addicts overcome their addiction, however there are a select few that have been commended for their unusually high success rates for permanent recovery. The Narconon Program has been in operation since the sixties, and was one of the first inpatient drug rehabs in the country. One of their premier facilities, Narconon Louisiana has also attained success in the field of recovery by proving that clients can break away from the life of an addict and lead a better, more fulfilled life without drugs.

Narconon has 140 centers in 44 countries ,This long-term, inpatient drug rehab has been in operation since 1966 and still maintains a 76% success rate. One of the biggest contributing factors to their success is that they do not follow the disease concept for addiction. Instead, clients work one on one with a trained drug and alcohol counselor to figure out what problem drugs and alcohol were a solution for in the first place. Once that problem is isolated and handled clients no longer feel the compulsion to get high as a way to get through life. This intensive counseling paired with a body detox and slew of other courses geared towards raising a person’s responsibility, ability to spot potentially dangerous situations, and repairing different relationships that were affected by the drug and/or alcohol use, is what makes the Narconon program so unique and successful.

So instead of focusing on war that had dragged on for way too long, let’s focus on getting our loved ones, our neighbors and our friends some long lasting help.

Drug Addiction Intervention – Harsh but Necessary

July 30th, 2009  |  Published in General

We have all heard the drug rehab testimonials of drug addicts who have undergone drug addiction intervention programs, but no one ever wants to admit that they are an addict so those stories and truths are pushed aside and the addict goes on believing that they do not have a problem and can handle their drug use.

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When a Mother Is Lost To Drugs

July 6th, 2009  |  Published in About Addiction

A drug addiction is something no one ever looks for but can sometimes have it sneak up on them. I remember when I was younger how much fun my mother was, always laughing and always happy. When I was a teenager she was involved in a car accident and had back injuries that caused her a great deal of pain. She went through therapy and was given drugs to help with her pain management. The drugs and therapy seemed to help and she was beginning to feel like herself again, we all assumed a full recovery would be the next step.

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How to Complete a Successful Addiction Intervention

June 8th, 2009  |  Published in About Addiction

It may be difficult to admit that a loved one has a drug addiction problem, let alone confronting them. Unfortunately without addiction intervention the loved ones will continue to spiral downwards. Drug addiction has changed from what it once was. There is no longer an easy way to determine a drug addict from the crowd. The past was a place where drug addicts lived on the street, were dirty and noticeably high. The future holds drug addicts that are your siblings, your teacher, and even in some cases your doctor.

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Drug Rehab Testimonials and Success Stories

June 8th, 2009  |  Published in Rehab Success

Drug addiction is one of the largest problems facing the entire world. It is not something that is confined to one or two areas, it is everywhere and can affect anyone. In fact, most families in America have at least one loved one who is suffering from drug or alcohol addiction. As the problem continues to rise the solutions are continually growing. Drug and alcohol rehab clinics, like Narconon facilities provide, offer a helping hand to the road to recovery and without them most addicts would relapse or not recover at all.

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What Is Drug Addiction?

June 8th, 2009  |  Published in About Addiction

Drugs are prescribed for many injuries and illnesses, we find them in our foods, our beverages, and in cigarettes. So what is drug addiction?

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Welcome to Drug Addiction Answers!

May 19th, 2009  |  Published in General

This Drug Addiction Answers site has been created by Drug Rehab That Works to provide real answers to the often difficult questions about drug addiction and rehab. We will be regularly posting articles about drug addiction and approaches to treatment.

For More Information

For more information on drug addiction and rehab issues see our articles on drugs as toxins and the detoxing the body of harmful drugs and toxins, articles on drug addiction and youth, articles on drug addiction and adults, and articles on drug addiction and rehab issues.