Alcoholism?
October 1, 2009 by Addiction and Substance Abuse Tips
Filed under More Addiction Answers
it runs in my family and im very aware of it. ive been drinking for under a year but lately its been every weekend and ive recently stopped because of finals i have for school and id rather not mess them up. but i catch myself thinking what am i going to do this weekend because im not drinking. im not getting like cravings for it like i need it but i feel as if i have nothing to do besides get drunk with my friends and walk around. is that a sign of future alcoholism?
Drug Detox Programs
Alcoholism?
June 30, 2009 by Addiction and Substance Abuse Tips
Filed under More Addiction Answers
it runs in my family and im very aware of it. ive been drinking for under a year but lately its been every weekend and ive recently stopped because of finals i have for school and id rather not mess them up. but i catch myself thinking what am i going to do this weekend because im not drinking. im not getting like cravings for it like i need it but i feel as if i have nothing to do besides get drunk with my friends and walk around. is that a sign of future alcoholism?
Alcohol Detoxification
drug detox?
June 29, 2009 by Addiction and Substance Abuse Tips
Filed under Addiction Detox & Rehab
has anyone heard of a drug detox place in beverly hills, ca. (or somewhere around there i think) that uses an i.v. method to clean the system and kill the cravings for drugs? has anyone had a negative reaction, or has had a personality change after undergoing this procedure? i need to know. something happened to someone i care alot about and i want to know.
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Suboxone is No Miracle
May 20, 2009 by Addiction and Substance Abuse Tips
Filed under Addiction Detox & Rehab
Unlike methadone, which is distributed in daily doses within federally controlled facilities, Suboxone is a prescription medication. And as physicians nationwide have been strongly and steadily encouraged to prescribe the drug, it’s found its way into a great many medicine cabinets. This wide availability has, for 5 years now, been creating its own set of problems, most of them unforeseen by the lawmakers who first approved the sale of buprenorphine in 2000.
One of the first problems was in its formulation. Suboxone is a small, orange pill in the shape of a stop sign, designed to be dissolved under the tongue. US officials, to prevent it from being snorted or injected, required the producer of Suboxone, Reckitt Benckiser Pharmaceuticals, to add naloxone, a compound that makes users who inject the drug become sick. But “street” chemists very quickly found simple ways of filtering out the naloxone from the crushed pills so they could be injected or snorted, and a new street drug was born, paid for by US taxpayers and as addictive as any other opiate-derivative.
Another problem is common to all prescription opiates—the street market. Some patients sell all or part of their Suboxone prescriptions to buy other drugs, often the very drug for which they purported to need addiction treatment in the first place. And in some cases, taxpayers are subsidizing such schemes because Medicaid is picking up the prescription costs. Well-meaning doctors can try to curb this activity by randomly calling in patients for pill counts. And it works for a while, until users begin renting their pills to each other. The street market is a sophisticated economy, and “bupe” at street level is on the rise.
But for all the hype, promise, political currency, and millions of federal dollars behind it, Suboxone has an even bigger problem in that it fails to do the very thing it was created for—to free the addict from opiate addiction. Today, what some call the “bupe method” of drug-addiction treatment is doing for addicts what methadone clinics have been doing since 1973—taking one addiction in trade for another. Suboxone, whether it’s used legally or illicitly, is a highly addictive opiate. And addiction to Suboxone requires the same attention as would addiction to heroine or prescription pain-killers. But replacement therapy is not—and has never been—the answer.
If you or some one you care about is struggling with an addiction to Suboxone, or to any opiate drug, please help them now.
Thanks to Rapid Drug Detox Center for contributing this article to our Addiction blog:
The Rapid Drug Detox Center provides a rapid drug detox procedure to help people dealing with opiate addiction including addiction to heroin, methadone and suboxone. We are available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week to discuss how you can free yourself from addiction. Call us at 1 (888) 825-1020.




