Drugs and Disease: A Look Forward


First published 2/18/2014.

Former National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) director Alan Leshner has been vilified by many for referring to addiction as a chronic, relapsing “brain disease.” What often goes unmentioned is Leshner’s far more interesting characterization of addiction as the “quintessential biobehavioral disorder.”

Multifactorial illnesses present special challenges to our way of thinking about disease. Addiction and other biopsychosocial disorders often show symptoms at odds with disease, as people generally understand it. For patients and medical professionals alike, questions about the disease aspect of addiction tie into larger fears about the medicalization of human behavior.

These confusions are mostly understandable. Everybody knows what cancer is—a disease of the cells. Schizophrenia? Some kind of brain illness. But addiction? Addiction strikes many people as too much a part of the world, impacted too strongly by environment, culture, behavior, psychology, to qualify. But many diseases have these additional components. In the end, the meaning of addiction matters less than the physiological facts of addiction.

One of the attractions of medical models of addiction is that there is such an extensive set of data supporting that alignment. Specifically, as set down in a famous paper by National Institute of Drug Abuse director Nora Volkow and co-author Joanna Fowler: “Understanding the changes in the brain which occur in the transition from normal to addictive behavior has major implications in public health…. We postulate that intermittent dopaminergic activation of reward circuits secondary to drug self-administration leads to dysfunction of the orbitofrontal cortex via the striato-thalamo-orbitofrontal circuit.” This cascade of events is often referred to as the “hijacking” of the brain by addictive drugs, but nothing is really being hijacked. Rather, the abusive use of drugs changes the brain, and that should come as no surprise, since almost everything we do in the world has the potential of changing the brain in some way. “Why are we so surprised that when you take a poison a thousand times, it makes some changes in your head?” said the former director of a chemical dependency treatment program at the University of Minnesota. “It makes sense that [addictive drugs] change things.”

Critics like Fernando Vidal object to a perceived shift from “having a brain” to “being a brain.” He is saying that he cannot see the point of “privileging” the brain as a locus for the study of human behavior. In “Addiction and the Brain-Disease Fallacy,” which appeared in Frontiers in Psychiatry, Sally Satel and Scott Lillienfeld write that “the brain disease model obscures the dimension of choice in addiction, the capacity to respond to incentives, and also the essential fact people use drugs for reasons (as consistent with a self-medication hypothesis).”

An excellent example of the excesses of the anti-brain discussions is an article by Rachel Hammer of Mayo Clinic and colleagues, in the American Journal of Bioethics-Neuroscience. “Many believed that a disease diagnosis diminishes moral judgment while reinforcing the imperative that the sick persons take responsibility for their condition and seek treatment.” But only a few paragraphs later, the authors admit: “Scholars have theorized that addiction-as-disease finds favor among recovering addicts because it provides a narrative that allows the person simultaneously to own and yet disown deviant acts while addicted.” Furthermore: “Addiction reframed as a pathology of the weak-brained (or weak-gened) bears just as must potential for wielding stigma and creating marginalized populations." But again, the risk of this potentially damaging new form of stigma “was not a view held by the majority of our addicted participants…”

And so on. The anti-disease model authors seem not to care that addicted individuals are often immensely helped by, and hugely grateful for, disease conceptions of their disorder, even though Hammer is willing to admit that the disease conception has “benefits for addicts’ internal climates.” In fact, it often helps addicts establish a healthier internal mental climate, in which they can more reasonably contemplate treatment. Historian David Courtwright, writing in BioSocieties, says that the most obvious reason for this conundrum is that “the brain disease model has so far failed to yield much practical therapeutic value.” The disease paradigm has not greatly increased the amount of “actionable etiology” available to medical and public health practitioners. “Clinicians have acquired some drugs, such as Wellbutrin and Chantix for smokers, Campral for alcoholics or buprenorphine for heroin addicts, but no magic bullets.” Physicians and health workers are “stuck in therapeutic limbo,” Courtwright believes.

“If the brain disease model ever yields a pharmacotherapy that curbs craving, or a vaccine that blocks drug euphoria, as some researchers hope,” Courtwright says, “we should expect the rapid medicalization of the field. Under those dramatically cost-effective circumstances, politicians and police would be more willing to surrender authority to physicians.” The drug-abuse field is characterized by, “at best, incomplete and contested medicalization.” That certainly seems to be true. If we are still contesting whether the brain has anything essential to do with addiction, then yes, almost everything about the field remains “incomplete and contested.”

Sociologists Nikolas Rose and Joelle M. Abi-Rached, in their book Neuro, take the field of sociology to task for its “often unarticulated conception of human beings as sense making creatures, shaped by webs of signification that are culturally and historically variable and embedded in social institutions that owe nothing substantial to biology.”

And for those worried about problems with addicts in the legal system, specifically, over issues of free will, genetic determinism, criminal culpability, and the “diseasing” of everything, Rose and Abi-Rached bring good news: “Probabilistic arguments, to the effect that persons of type A, or with condition B, are in general more likely to commit act X, or fail to commit act Y, hold little or no sway in the process of determining guilt.” And this seems unlikely to change in the likely future, despite the growing numbers of books and magazine articles saying that it will.

Opponents of the disease model of addiction and other mental disorders are shocked, absolutely shocked, at the proliferation of “neuro” this and “neuro” that, particularly in the fields of advertising and self-improvement, where neurotrainers and neuroenhancing potions are the talk of the moment. Sociologists claim to see some new and sinister configuration of personhood, where a journalist might just see a pile of cheesy advertising and a bunch of fast-talking science hucksters maneuvering for another shot at the main chance. When has selling snake oil ever been out of fashion?

For harm reductionists, addiction is sometimes viewed as a learning disorder. This semantic construction seems to hold out the possibility of learning to drink or use drugs moderately after using them addictively. The fact that some non-alcoholics drink too much and ought to cut back, just as some recreational drug users need to ease up, is certainly a public health issue—but one that is distinct in almost every way from the issue of biochemical addiction. By concentrating on the fuzziest part of the spectrum, where problem drinking merges into alcoholism, we’ve introduced fuzzy thinking with regard to at least some of the existing addiction research base. And that doesn’t help anybody find common ground.

Graphics Credit: http://www.docslide.com/disease-model/

What Mark Kleiman Wants You To Know About Drugs


The public policy guru guiding state legalization efforts.

Mark A. R. Kleiman is the Professor of Public Policy at UCLA, editor of the Journal of Drug Policy Analysis, author of many books, and generally regarded as one of the nation’s premier voices on drug policy and criminal justice issues. Mr. Kleiman provides advice to local, state, and national governments on crime control and drug policy. When the state of Washington needed an adviser on the many policy questions they left unanswered with the passage of I-502, which legalized marijuana in that state, they turned to Kleiman.

In the past two years, Kleiman has co-authored to Q and A-style books: Drugs and Drug Policy: What Everyone Needs to Know (2011) with Jonathan P. Caulkins and Angela Hawken; and Marijuana Legalization: What Everyone Needs to Know (2012) with Hawken, Caulkins, and Beau Kilmer.

Here, excerpted from the two books, is a brief sampling of Kleiman and his colleagues on a variety of drug and alcohol issues.

Is marijuana really the nation’s leading cash crop?

“Alas, the facts say otherwise. Analyses purporting to support the claim must contort the numbers, citing the retail price of marijuana but the farmgate price of other products, or pretending that all marijuana consumed in the United States is sinsemilla, or ignoring the fact that most marijuana used in the United States is imported, or simply starting with implausible estimates of U.S. production…. marijuana [is] in the top fifteen, but not the top five, cash crops, ranking somewhere between almonds and hay, and perhaps closest to potatoes and grapes.”

How much drug-related crime, violence, and corruption would marijuana legalization eliminate?

“Not much…. Eighty-nine percent of survey respondents report obtaining marijuana most recently from a friend or relative, and more than half (58 percent) say the obtained it for free. That stands in marked contrast to low-level distribution of heroin and crack which often occurs in violent, place-based markets controlled by armed gangs.”

How much would legal marijuana cost to produce?

“The punch line is that full legalization at the national level—as opposed to only legalizing possession and retail sale—could cut production costs to just 1 percent of current wholesale prices…. This would make legal marijuana far and away the cheapest intoxicant on a per-hour basis.”

How would legalization affect me if I’m a marijuana grower?

“It would almost certainly put you out of business. At first glance, legalization might seem like a great opportunity for you…. But legalization will completely upend your industry, and the skills that made you successful at cultivating illegal crops will not have much value. A few dozen professional farmers could produce enough marijuana to meet U.S. consumption at prices small-scale producers couldn’t possibly match. Hand cultivators would be relegated to niche markets for organic or specialty strains.”

Would marijuana regulations and taxes in practice approach the public health ideal?

“If there is a licit, for-profit marijuana industry, one should expect its product design, pricing, and marketing actions to be designed to promote as much frequent use and addiction as possible. Efforts to tax and regulate in ways that promote public health would have to contend with an industry mobilizing its employees, shareholders, and consumers against any effective restriction. Since the industry profits from problem users, we should expect that lobbying effort to be devoted to blocking policies that would effectively control addiction. The alcohol and tobacco industries provide good examples.”

Can we persuade children not to use drugs?

"Even the best prevention programs have only modest effects on actual behavior, and may programs have no effect at all on drug use…. Anesthesiologists know far more about drugs and drug abuse than could possibly be taught in middle-school prevention programs; nonetheless, they have high rates of substance abuse, in part because they have such easy access.”

Why is there a shortage of drug treatment?

“Some specific categories—especially those in need of residential care, and more especially mothers with children in need of residential care—face chronic shortages. But if we had enough capacity for all those who need treatment, many of those slots would be empty because not all the people who ought to fill them want treatment.”

How much money is involved?

“Most of the numbers about drug abuse and drug trafficking that officials peddle to credulous journalists are little better than fiction. Estimates of hundreds of billions of dollars per year in international drug trade—which would make it comparable to food, oil, and arms—do not have a basis in the real world. The most recent serious estimate of the total retail illicit drug market in the United States—by all accounts the country whose residents spend the most on illicit drugs—puts the figure at about $65 billion.”

When it comes to drugs, why can’t we think calmly and play nice?

“American political analysts talk about ‘wine-track (college-educated) and ‘beer track’ (working-class) voters…. So the politics of drug policy is never very far from identity politics…. The notion that illicit drug taking is largely responsible for the plight of minorities (and of poor people generally) and that income-support programs have the perverse consequence of maintaining drug habits has been a staple of a certain form of American political rhetoric at least since Ronald Reagan.”

Are we stuck with our current alcohol problem?

"By no means…. tripling the tax would raise the price of a drink by 20 percent and reduce the volume of drinking in about the same proportion. Most of the reduced drinking would come from heavy drinkers, both because they dominate the market in volume terms and because their consumption is more price-sensitive…."

How to overcome a heroin or painkiller addiction in opiate rehab


Heroin and painkiller addiction are a couple nasty habits and this may be putting it bit mildly. Are you tired of spending all of your hard earned money on heroin and other opiate painkillers? Are you sick and tired of being sick and tired? If so, maybe you need to think of some ways of how you can stop using painkillers.

Actually there are several ways that a person can quit using drugs. Probably the best way for most people is going to some type of drug rehab. Now again there are many different types are rehabs in the few that would to be addicted to opiates you'll probably want to find a rehab that specializes in opiate addiction.

Once you determine what type are rehab you need you are also going to have to figure out whether you need your every day run of the mill drug rehab or are you going to need a rehab that can medically detox you from heroin or other opiate medications like OxyContin, Vicodin, or Percocet.

How you can beat pain pills addiction




















Don't be confused detoxing from prescription medications can be just as difficult is trying to come off heroin. I know this to be true because I have detox him several different opiate medications. So if you want to be as comfortable as possible when going through opiate or her own withdrawal I would definitely choose the medical detox route.

If you choose this method you will be looked after by a staff of trained professionals. They will be there for you around-the-clock seven days a week to make you as comfortable as possible during your painkiller withdrawal. They will also administer other prescription medications to help ease the pain and discomfort caused by your heroin or opiate withdrawal symptoms. In most cases the entire detox process will take a little less than a week. Now keep in mind that once this process is completed the next step is residential treatment.

In residential treatment you will be around many other addicts and alcoholics just like yourself that are trying to learn how to overcome an addiction to prescription medications as well as an addiction to heroin or alcohol. While there you will be required to attend lectures, 12 step programs like narcotics anonymous, group therapy, one-on-one substance abuse counseling, and videos about addiction.

Back in the day when I first started getting clean and sober residential treatment was like 28 days. Now due to insurance policies and whatnot the maximum stays more like 10 to 14 days. This is not a very long time for an addict to learn all that they need to know about how to stay clean once they leave substance abuse treatment. It would be my recommendation that you pay very close attention to what the counselors and staff are trying to teach you because whether you realize it or not your life depends on it.

Recovery is not a game you are not there to start a new relationship and as a matter of fact relationships that start in rehab will not work. Trust me I've tried that too. One of you always end up using and the other will follow soon after. Then you are right back in the same boat needing to get clean again. The reason I'm telling you all this is so that you can avoid the mistakes that I made.

Good luck







How can get the best addiction treatment for opiate withdrawal


Okay so maybe you are thinking about going into addiction treatment for your opiate withdrawal problem.

If so then you are ready to take action. My recommendation to you is to get on the phone and call up local treatment centers in your area.

You may not have a lot of money, and you may not have health insurance, but if you are diligent about trying to obtain treatment you should be able to do so. Someone out there will help you to get the help that you need.

It is not an excuse to just keep drinking or using drugs and say that you don't have enough money for treatment. There are agencies and treatment centers that can help you even if you don't have access to insurance.

Getting the best addiction help


















Once you have made the decision to commit treatment, the rest is just details. Get on the phone and figure out who is willing to help you and what they can do for you. If they cannot give you treatment directly asked them if there is someone who could help you with funding or with treatment.

If you are using heavy opiates such as painkillers or heroine, you'll probably need an opiate detox. After detox you will likely go to residential treatment and probably be exposed to 12 step meetings. Try to keep an open mind about the meetings even if you don't necessarily like them first.

Most people who go to treatment don't end up making permanent changes. They might try the meetings for a while but they lose interest and they go back to their addiction.

If you want to make it work in the long run you have to commit to long-term changes. This is hard to do because most of us are used to getting results more quickly than.

If you have been to treatment several times and you continue to relapse, then you might consider going to long-term treatment at some point. Long-term rehab does not work for everyone, but it may work for you if nothing else has.

You may also try getting a sponsor in your recovery journey. A sponsor can help you in the same way the spiritual guide can help someone who is seeking religion. If you feel lost in your recovery journey you may benefit from having someone else to talk to and bounce ideas off. A sponsor can also help you see problems that you might be running into that you are not aware of.

I strongly urge everyone to go to treatment and get professional help if they have struggled with addiction. It does not have a 100% success rate, but it is certainly better than nothing. You have nothing to lose by trying.

Heroin addiction and detox are hard to but here is how to get through opiate withdrawal


That are may ways a person detox heroin and make it through heroin withdrawal. People develop a heroin addiction by finding it made available to them in the most inconspicuous places, like bowling alleys and other innocent looking places that make for finding targets susceptible to the lure of heroin. We know that heroin is much like morphine and many other opiate based medications. Both chemicals act to suppress pain, whether in the physical body or in the mind of an abused or otherwise psychotic person. 

Persons who sell heroin need a steady supply of customers and their customers have to have an income. Persons who push heroin don't care where their customers pick up the cash that they need to support their 
heroin addiction. That is why many of their customers start off as getting money from there jobs or from the public domains known as welfare and other charity checks. Heroin is not particular who it claims for its victims. It could care less whether you came from Park Place or Park bench. The thing is once it puts its meat hooks into you you're through and it's all over but the crying.

Once a victim is targeted and sold to by drug dealer or pusher of heroin, he becomes the property, as it were, of the pusher who has the product that the addict needs to maintain there addiction. Heroin dealers are sometimes also very wealthy and occasionally influential in the community at large. 




How to through heroin detox and withdrawal 

There is very little that a victim of heroin addiction can do to get free of their addiction because heroin is not going to disappear anytime soon. A heroin addict can get free of the drug and if you would like to learn more please visit here
 but like the addict of say, tobacco, just seeing it is enough to send you off your change of habit into a serious and probably painful relapse. 

If this sounds like you or someone you know I would recommend that you seek help as soon as possible. Addicts are dying every day from heroin overdose. It kind of makes me think of you never actually see the bullet that kills you same thing with heroin addiction overdose. 

Any addict can stop using drugs find a new way to live clean. My suggestion to anyone who really wants to kick heroin would be to go to heroin rehab. There you will be treated for your addictions by trained specialist who will administer medication to help your 
 go as smoothly as possible. Most people who have been to this kind of rehab report that they suffered very little and if you want to learn how visit here.. That's great news because most heroin addicts have an overabundance of fear when it comes to withdrawal.
Good luck


Making goals to overcome addiction and achieving them is very rewarding 

There are many things that an addict can do to help them enjoy long term heroin recovery. Another good place to start is to set some goals for yourself. I made a list of short term, which can be from for example, 30 to 90 days. Just pick something that is not overly hard to complete.

How to overcome addiction using narcotics anonymous is one in your goals


















I used attending 30 meetings in 30 days as one of my goals and growth strategies to beat drug addiction, you could even make it 90 whatever you fell comfortable with. Now you will want to have someone to help you with this it could be your substance abuse counselor or a sponsor. The reason is they can help keep you accountable by asking you every week how you are progressing with your goals.

Next we will want to make a mid range goal that should be anywhere from 6 months to a year. Once again choose one that is doable. Maybe you have a desire to be more healthy so you could set up a fitness program; for instance, you could join a gym but I would stick with something that you can do for free. 

Here is something that may interest you that I still use today which is going for a long walk everyday. Its really not that long its only like 1 and 1/2 miles but that's enough. I also do push ups and sit ups. If this is something you may be interested in be creative and make your own program. 

Lastly you will want to make your long term goal. Maybe you have always wanted to go back to school are have a better career, own your own home or whatever. Make your goal from anywhere from 1 to 10 years. Keep in mind that you can always modify them if need be. Goals are great especially when you have worked hard to accomplish them. The felling one gets when a goal is accomplish is worth its weight in gold. 

Lastly keep in mind that what you put into your program you will get back in other words half measures will avail us nothing. Feel good about your goals because after all something we are doing to better ourselves. Goals are not that hard to accomplish all we have to do is put a lot of work into them every day and before we know it they will be complete.

Good luck

How Visiting A Drug Detox Center Can Add To A Successful Recovery


If you happen to be on the fence so to speak thinking about going to a drug detox center then if you do decide to go it may prove to be one of the best decisions you have ever made in your life. Battling an addiction is often a very difficult process for individuals. It is not uncommon for someone to have strong cravings and even relapse at times.

Getting help for addiction in a drug detox center


However, those that seek drug addiction help may find that their efforts are more successful. As a matter of fact, statistics indicate that persons suffering from addiction can immensely benefit from a network of support. While there are many different ways this can be obtained, drug detox rehab may be one of the best options.


Common Myths

There are several myths associated with these types of centers. One of these is that they are out for money and aren't of much help after the person has become clean. This is completely false. Several of these programs have outreach programs and other types of services that they offer to the client even after successful completion. These addiction recovery tools can help increase the odds of staying clean and sober, when taken advantage of.

Getting Started

One of the best ways to learn about this type of detox is by visiting a center firsthand. Not only can this jump-start recovery, but can pave the way for a drug-free life. Sure, it seems like a small step, but it’s one of the most crucial things that the addict can do. It allows the opportunity to learn about what the program is like and to decide if this is the right option or not, while ultimately setting the individual up to succeed.

Choosing the best detox center

What I would do if I were considering on going to a inpatient  rehab is do a little research; for example ask a couple of them what there aftercare programs consist of. I would ask them if there rehab offers outpatient treatment when you have completed the inpatient drug treatment to be detoxed from drugs to help you stop drug abuse.

With this type of information at your disposal you should have little problem making a decision on which rehab you will attend. Recovery is all about taking action and by doing this you are on your way to a successful drug addiction recovery.

Good luck


Is Klonopin Addictive? Too much of anything Is bad


Has your doctor prescribed clonazepam to you and you want to know is Klonopin addictive; furthermore;  Clonazepam is a trade name of a medication belonging to the drug category of benzodiazepines in the United States which is commonly used for panic attacks, seizure disorders, epilepsy, can be used to treat anxiety.

Disorders that involve spastic movement  such as restless leg syndrome and rapid eye movement behavior syndrome as well as some types of migraine, anxiety and panic disorders just to name.

Is Clonazepam addictive? Yes, long term use result to addiction. It is one of the most used for recreational purposes.  

Some of the side effects and symptoms of Klonopin withdrawalinclude:

  • Hallucination

  • Mood swings or personality changes

  • Depression

  • Irritability

  • Dizziness

  • light and sound sensitivity

  • Tachycardia

  • Tingling in fingers

  • Nausea vomiting and

  • Diarrhea.




















People who are addicted display behavioral and social changes. Students dramatically would have school problems that were not previously present or not too severe such as absences, disinterest and drop in grades.

Drug dependents would usually be lethargic, neglecting personal hygiene and grooming, sudden change in money handling like unreasonable spending, stealing and have impaired family relations.


There are a number of treatment centers in Florida that can help you to recover from drug and alcohol addiction, and some people will tend to get hung up on figuring out which one they should go to or which one has the highest success rate, and so on.

It doesn't matter.

By all means, go to treatment.  Treatment can and does work, and any addict or alcoholic who is struggling to overcome an addiction should definitely go to rehab.  It is absolutely worthwhile and I am not saying that it is not worth going.  What I am saying is that it doesn't matter where you go or what program they employ or how much it costs or how many therapists they have there and so on.  It just doesn't matter.

The addict or alcoholic in question is either ready to get clean and sober or they are not.  They have either surrendered fully to their disease or they have not.  So really, the need for treatment is sort of like an afterthought in most cases. 

If you are pushing and shoving the addict with the benzodiazepine addiction to please, please, please, just go to rehab, then it is not going to work for them.  Not in a million years.  But if they are completely broken down and devastated with their life and really do not care if or where they go to treatment, then that is a very good sign that they are truly ready to stay sober.

Many people believe that there must be a magic bullet out there.  We hold out this hope for the addict or alcoholic in our lives, a hope that some treatment center or rehab out there must have the answer for this person.  And if only we could get the addict to go to the right treatment center, then they would "get it" and their life would be transformed.  It is this hope for a "magic bullet" that causes us misery and misleads us into thinking there is an answer "out there somewhere" for the addict in our life.

This is not true.  The answer is within.  The answer is in surrender.  Once the addict surrenders, any treatment center will work.  It could be the worst rehab in the world, but if someone is truly at the point of change, then it will not matter how bad the place is and the treatment will work.  It is all about willingness and their level of surrender.  If they are still clinging to some part of their denial then no treatment center can help them.

Good luck

Codeine overdose is a possibility for those who abuse opiate drugs


A codeine overdose can happen easily. Most people who receive prescription painkillers know that they need to follow the directions on the container exactly. Failing to follow them can have dire consequences.

Opioid and prescription painkiller addiction and abuse can have long-term effects, but these long-term effects are different from the symptoms of an overdose. Victims of an overdose of codeine will suffer from shallow breath, rapid heart rate and unconsciousness.

What should someone do if he encounters an overdose? If he can recognize the early warning sings, he should call a hospital. If someone comes upon a person who is unconscious, he should treat the individual for shock and call the local poison control center immediately.

The hospital should send out an ambulance quickly. Most poison control centers will not tell a person with no medical training to take any course of action. The victim must be monitored by a medical professional until the poison clears his system.




























How to get help for codeine addiction  

If you need help in finding recovery from an addiction to codeine then you might want to go to rehab.  There you can get started on a new life in recovery and of course your success in staying clean and sober will be entirely up to you.  Drug rehab can give you the opportunity that you need to start a new life, but they cannot do the actual work for you.  Going to rehab makes it pretty easy to get a few weeks clean.

After you leave, however, the real work of staying clean actually starts and you are faced with the challenge of not using drugs while still having your freedom to do so if you choose.

How you can get through hydrocdone withdrawal

There is no magic bullet when it comes to recovery and drug rehab is merely one path that might help you on your way it can also help you to get trough a withdrawal from hydrocodone.  If you leave rehab only to end up relapsing the next day or the next week or the next month, then this does not really serve you and is a pretty bit waste of time and money.

In order to get the true benefits of recovery you are going to want to stay clean for a considerable period of time and that means that you need to put in some serious work.  Unfortunately it takes a great deal of effort to stay clean, especially in the beginning, but that effort will pay off in a big way if you stick it out in your recovery.

For every year that you stay clean and sober you will save yourself several thousand dollars and several years of life span.  If you really stop and consider these benefits then it is really astounding.

In addition to your life and your money, you will also significantly alter the quality of your life and greatly change the amount of stress and emotional problems that you will have to deal with.  The benefits of sobriety are absolutely enormous and you have to live it in order to really appreciate it.

Unfortunately, most addicts will not put forth the effort needed to recover.  They might string together a few weeks of sobriety but then they will get lazy and slowly revert back to their old ways.  The only way to prevent this is by taking massive action over a sustained period of time.  That means putting forth a tremendous effort after leaving drug rehab and continuing to grow as a person long after you leave rehab.  Not easy but definitely worth it.

Good luck

Many people ask is addiction help needed to achieve goals for success in drug addiction recovery?



Goals for success in drug addiction recovery can probably be found in the AA bible. When somebody's swimming for their life, though, they probably don't want to be bothered with flipping through a lot of soggy pages. Of course, the first goal is to not use right at this moment. The second goal is to not use right at that moment. The third goal is to not to use right then and there. If a drug addict can reach those first three challenges, even if they arise one on top of the other in a minute and a half span, there is a fighting chance.

It is very important for the addict those who are trying to give them addiction help to understand about how to stop drug abuse.

Getting addiction help to maintain drug addiction recovery

Urges are surges, and like shock waves and bucking broncos, must be ridden until the riding is done. The next goal is to prepare for the next violent, bucking ride. The best way to prepare for this is to have a network of addiction help. For this other members of AA or NA programs work well. The reason for this is you can call on the 24/7 and they will be there to help you to get through whatever you are going through.




































Remove all triggers from your life

Strip away the things that chain and trigger should be the next goal. If a certain person makes somebody want to use, then that certain person should be avoided. What song sounded the best while high? That song shouldn't be played anymore.

Finding a sponsor to help you through the hard times

The next goal for the recovering addict should be to find a strong anchor and somebody to be called upon when the disease of addiction is stomping the ground around them. That person has to be stronger than drugs and sweeter than candy, and more patient than a stoplight. This person will more than likely be the person you chose to be your sponsor.

My sponsor turned out to be my best friend we do a lot of things together like go to the movies or just hand out at one of our houses and talk. He is also there to help me to write the steps. If you get lucky enough to find a sponsor like this you had better hang on to them.
I call mine on a regular basis that is not to say it’s a one way street because he also calls me and picks me up to go to meetings and what not.

One of the biggest goals an addict should have is Happiness

The next goal should be to find happiness and delight in anything not drug related. The pleasure centers of the drug addict need to be changed ASAP at this moment. Find delight; find it in anything or anybody that is sober. Enjoy, and learn to discover the pleasures of a drug free life. I mean if you can not be happy in your new life being clean and sober what is the point because you were plenty miserable while you were abusing drugs every day.

Good luck



How Inpatient treatment can help you overcome an addiction to heroin or other opioid drugs


If you need help with opiate or heroin addiction then you should consider going to drug detox.  There you can get started on a new life in recovery by getting started with a fresh slate on your life.

Getting clean and sober and dried out is the first step in overcoming any sort of addiction.  Abstinence is the baseline for recovery.  You have to start with a clean slate in order to start making real growth and progress in your life.

Inpatient treatment can help you overcome an addiction to heroin or other opioid drugs

After you have this clean slate established from drug therapy then you will probably go to residential treatment.  This is a part of most inpatient drug detox programs and the whole point is so that you do not simply end up relapsing again and having to go through another detox.  If you do end up relapsing right away then this is quite a waste of your time and money.  A must better path is to leave treatment and start making a serious effort on your recovery so that you can ultimately change your life and not go back to your old way of living.

















Inpatient substance addiction detox

They say there is only one thing you have to change in recovery and that is everything so why not start with inpatient substance abuse treatment.  It is sort of a joke but at the same time there is some truth to it.  Ask someone who has found success in recovery and they will tell you that yes, they indeed did have to change everything in their life in order to recover.  The process of recovery is really that intense and those who fall short of this necessary level of change are doomed to end up relapsing.

So how can you insure that you will stay clean after leaving detox?  How can you insure success in recovery?  There is no sure fire guarantee but if you push yourself to take massive amounts of action every single day then this is getting you off to a good start.

Most people have a hidden belief that changing their life in recovery must be about changing their mind.  They reason that their thinking is screwed up and that is what screws them up as far as addiction and using drugs is concerned.  This is partially true but the solution is not to change your thinking as that is impossible.

Instead, simply take massive action every day and your thinking will change automatically.  The secret is in the doing, not in the thinking.  "Bring your body and your mind will follow."  People get stuck on the belief that they have to change their thoughts, when in reality they just need to get their tail in gear and take some real action towards recovery.  The thinking will straighten out later on.

Drug therapy can help you overcome painkiller addiction and get clean and sober



Drug therapy is basically a therapy that uses medications to help with substance abuse addiction or medicines to treat various diseases. Medicines are usually given orally in the form of capsules, pills or liquid form or are injected into the muscles or tissues of the patient.

However, using medications can sometimes cause unexpected and temporary side effects when they are combined with certain herbal remedies, foods or other drugs. Thus, the method of administrating this therapy using drugs varies largely according to the patient and the condition that has to be treated.

One of the greatest benefits of drug therapy is the fact that that this therapy not only aids in treating diseases and infections, but also helps alleviate symptoms associated with various problems; for example, a person with an addiction to drugs such as opiates prescription medications may be used to alleviate opiate withdrawal symptoms.

Furthermore, it can include using antibiotics can help treat common ailments, antidepressants are used to ease symptoms of depression. Similarly, while medications can be used to provide pain relief after an accident or surgery, they can also be used to fight addiction in a positive manner.

However, seeking the advice of your physician before taking any medications is highly recommended to experience successful result.

If you are addicted to prescription painkillers then I would suggest that you contact the physician that prescribed you the medication you have the problem with. They can help you to come up with a solution to stop using painkillers. It could be as simple as tapering off you medication or it could involve going to a drug rehab for a medical opiate detox.

Inpatient treatment treatment and drug detox  can help you overcome painkiller addiction and to find recovery if you have been struggling with drug or alcohol addiction.

The important thing is that you take the proper steps to get yourself into treatment of some sort so that you have a chance at living a new life in recovery.  If you don't interrupt the cycle of addiction then it is pretty difficult to make any sort of lasting changes.  Drug rehab is an opportunity to get a few weeks of clean time in so that you can evaluate your life and make the necessary changes.
















How to overcome an addiction to pain medication 

Solutions to beat a pain medication addiction

· Make a decision to stop using opiate painkillers

· Next you will need to figure out how you intend to do this

· Options include tapering off of opiates or going to drug rehab

· Then you will want to find a drug rehab near you

Now if you are serious about staying clean in recovery then you need to take big action.  You can do this in a number of different ways and successful recovery will likely look different for different people.  But the common thread is that everyone who stays clean and sober after leaving drug rehab is that they will have taken a massive amount of action in their life.

You can prove this last point to yourself by interviewing recovering addicts and alcoholics.  Ask them if they can look back at their early recovery for a moment and tell you something specific: did they just make a modest effort in early recovery, or did they push themselves to take a huge amount of action?

In every single case I can assure you that the person living in successful recovery will automatically and instantly say that they took massive action.  This is a given for anyone who has managed to stay clean and sober and they will answer this same way every time without hesitation.  Of course they took massive action, how else would they be standing before you today being clean and sober?

Do we actually think that sobriety and recovery might happen by accident?  Do we actually think that some addicts just get lucky and sort of blunder their way into recovery and basically have an easy time of staying sober every day just due to sheer luck?  This is the most ridiculous idea and yet the vast majority of addicts and alcoholics in early recovery expect to be able to get phenomenal results without putting in the work.

Folks, it ain't going to happen and if you want to stay clean and sober and have an awesome new life then you have to do a massive amount of work to get there.  To give you a rough idea of what all is involved, some addicts live in long term recovery for 2 years straight and when they leave out of there they still have a lot of effort and work to put into their sobriety.  This is a long hard journey so be prepared to put in the effort.

Good luck

Is hillbilly heroin running your life and you want to know how to stop using oxycodone


Oxycodone also known as Hillbilly heroin is used to manage chronic or acute pain. It can also be used to treat diarrhea predominant irritable bowel syndrome and severe diarrhea. It is a drug that can be addictive though.

What are the side effects of Oxycodone 

Some of the effects that people may get from taking it are memory loss, fatigue, nausea, dizziness, disturbing nightmares, dry mouth, heavy sweating, and anxiety. Some people have experienced abdominal pain, urine retention, loss of appetite, and hiccups. In over doses, high doses, or in people who cannot handle the drug, it can cause clammy skin, shallow breathing, circulatory collapse, and death.

People can experience oxycodone withdrawal symptoms if they stop using the drug abruptly. So if they are using oxycodone, they should gradually wean themselves off it. The symptoms of withdrawal can include panic attack, muscle pain, fever, and more.

So if you are taking oxycontin drug for something and are starting think that you may have an oxydodone addiction just remember the first thing you should do is to contact the doctor that prescribed them too you.



















The reason for this is that they can set a schedule to wean yourself from oxycodone. If that dose not work or you think it will not they more than likely know of an opiate rehab that can help you.

· Contact prescribing physician

· Make a commitment to slowly wean off of oxycontin or percocet

· Go to an opiate addiction rehab or treatment facility

One of the best ways to get help to overcome this nasty addiction is to go to drug rehab. I would try and locate one within driving distance from where you live then you family and friends can come to the rehab on visiting day to support you. It is very important for a recovering addict to feel that they matter and are loved. I know for a fact that a lot of addicts feel that they are not.

The good thing about going to inpatient drug treatment or rehab is that you can be medically detoxed from oxycodone. Most people with this type of addiction are afraid to go through withdrawal and being detoxed medically you can rest assured that you will not suffer from withdrawal from oxycodone once the prescription medication they give you to ease the pain of withdraw kicks in.

A lot of people who become addicted to this medicine will also use heroin because its cheaper but its probably more addicting and one could end up with a hillbilly heroin addiction which can be worse because you never know what the heroin is cut with.

I would suggest that if you want to stop using oxycodone that you seek help right away because that things will get worse I know this to be true because it happened to me. I thing to keep in mind is that addiction progressive and fatal; in fact, a lot of folks end up dying from an overdose before they get the help they need to quit using.

Good luck


What are the Long term effects of methadone and how to overcome opiate addiction


Methadone is an oral synthetic opioid in the same class with heroin that is medically used as an analgesic and treatment for opioid dependency. Methadone Maintenance Therapy is for individuals who failed to abstain from illicit drug use but would like to maintain opiate abstinence for significant periods for several months to a number of years.

Desired normal results after administration for chronic pain is pain relief to the point that the pain is tolerable. For opiate drug addiction control purposes, is that the individual reduces illicit drug intake almost immediately upon start of treatment and total abstinence as the treatment progresses.

Adverse effects to Methadone use is rare but common long term effects of Methadone are usually sweating, constipation, dizziness, drowsiness, itching, urine retention, stomach cramps, sleep related abnormalities like insomnia and nightmares, change in libido, and altered appetite. Rapid dosage increase may cause euphoria, drowsiness, mild nausea, and vomiting.




















How to get through and beat methadone addiction 

If you are addicted to this medication the best thing you can do for yourself is to enter some sort of drug rehab. It has been my experience that being methadone is an opioid drug then your best bet to successfully beat methadone would be going to opiate rehab.

· Make up your mind that you really want to stop drug abuse
· Locate an exceptable rehab near you
· Then make plans to enter substance addiction treatment as soon as you can

If you are struggling to beat an addiction to methadone then think about drug rehab and taking the proper action to do something about your problem.  It all starts with action and therefore it all starts with a decision to take action.  Surrender to the idea that you can no longer use drugs successfully and then make the decision to do something about your problem.  The only thing that is required is action.

You can ask for help and ask for guidance and people will generally show you where to go and what to do.  If you ask around and ask the right people and ask those who care about you where you can get some help they will almost always direct you towards treatment.

You might get on the phone and call around to local treatment centers and ask them what you need to do to get some help.  Either they will help you directly or they will point you in the direction of someone who can.

Now once you are at this point of earnestly seeking help for your problem then you are almost right where you need to be.  The only thing left for you to do now is to start the ball rolling and then never stop.  That means that  you need to start chasing a new life in recovery and start taking massive action every single day.

This might start with a trip to rehab and it will only end on the day that you die (or relapse).  Now you definitely do not want to relapse and so your new goal in life is going to be to aim for continuous personal growth.  For many people this will be a spiritual quest, but it does not necessarily have to be put in religious terms in your mind.
You can pursue a new life in recovery and make it one of continuous growth without getting caught up in religious ideas.

Some people will gravitate towards a more spiritual solution and that is fine.  The truth is that the solution is holistic and that can easily accommodate both a spiritual and also a less religious approach.

Pushing yourself to grow holistically in recovery is really the point of any spiritual quest, and any drug rehab that is doing their job properly will push you to do this in your recovery.  Most rehabs actually will do this and so it is up to you to follow their simple suggestions and take massive action after you leave rehab.

Good luck



How to Recognize Heroin Overdose Symptoms and what you can do to help



When someone experiences heroin overdose symptoms, they may find that it comes upon someone who is unconscious with blue lips. He may observe rapid and shallow breathing. If the individual knows how to take a pulse, it is also possible that they may notice that this person has a rapid heartbeat.























Before a heroin overdose of heroin victim enters the unconscious stage, some of these symptoms are present.  If the patient realizes what has happened to him, he may have the presence of mind to call for medical help but this is very rare and usually not the case because they are enjoying the high so much and do not want to see it end. Most drug users do not overdose on these drugs intentionally. They simply take too much when they are partying and getting high.

I was a heroin users for over 30 years and my thing was shooting heroin. Now keep in mind that this can be particularly dangerous if you do not know how pure the dope is that your getting. I was kind of a greedy addict and I would shoot a lot more dope than what was necessary.

The wise person knows that the intent of the user does not matter. What he knows is that if he does not help a person suffering form an overdose, that person is likely to die.  The key to survival is acting as quickly as possible.

How to help someone that has succumbed to an overdose of heroin

Where I came from when someone fell out or overdosed the first thing we would do is empty their pockets and relieve them of any dope or cash that they had on them. Then we would do what we could for them. Sometimes it was as easy as putting ice on their private parts and other times we had to call an ambulance.

If you have ever had this experience and lived through it and are still using heroin I would suggest that you seek help right away because you never know when you will take a fatal overdose its kind of like you never see the bullet that actually kills you.

There are many good opiate rehabs out the that can help you with your addiction to heroin. The good thing about them is that the addict can be medically detoxed so they will not have to experience any harsh heroin withdrawal symptoms

Make plans to locate a rehab near you today and give them a call. I can tell you this I am glad that I went to rehab because I am clean and sober today. If I had not have made the decision to stop using heroin I seriously doubt that I would be writing this trying to help others to get clean.

Good luck

What are the withdrawal symptoms of hydrocodone and how can I get through them without using


Here is a preview of the withdrawal symptoms of hydrocodone one can expect if they have been using this prescription medication for and extended period of time. Some people claim that they are comparable to heroin withdrawal but I am not quite sure I would go there far being that I am a recovering addiction myself and have personally went through withdrawal from both on separate occasions.

How to beat hydrocodone in opiate rehab

If you are trying to overcome an addiction to hydrocodone and make it through withdrawal with a minimal amount of suffering your best bet would be to got some type of opiate rehab or drug treatment center.

Symptoms of hydrocodone withdrawal

· Insomnia

· Abdominal cramps

· Diarrhea

· Nausea or vomiting

· Fever

· Runny nose

· Muscle aches and pains

· Restless leg syndrome

· Tremors

· Urges to use hydrocodone

· Excessive sweating

· Chills

· Rapid breathing

· Anxiety

· Panic attacks

· Depression

· Frequent yawning

· Dilated pupils

Using opiate treatment to recovery from substance abuse addiction 

If you are struggling with snorting hydrocodone then you might need opiate treatment in order to help you stop hydrocodone.  The key to overcoming any addiction is to take real action in solving the problem.

Sometimes people can fall into the trap of thinking that genuinely wishing things were different will actually change anything.  In fact this sort of thinking will only make a drug problem worse and the only thing that will ultimately help an addict is to take drastic action and do something about their problem.

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Options to rehab could be attending 12 step meetings

Now one of the biggest steps that a person can take is to go into a drug treatment center.  There are some alternatives to this of course, as someone could instead just try going to a few 12 step meetings for example.

But that is not generally going to have as big of an impact as going into rehab will have.  In fact, when you check into treatment you will probably end up going to some 12 step meetings anyway.  But you will get a lot more help than just this as the benefits to going to an inpatient drug rehab are a lot greater than simple exposure to 12 step meetings.

Consider the fact that you are being removed from the environment in which you used drugs to make it through your withdrawal from hydrocodone.  This alone is a huge factor that many people underestimate.  When you check into rehab for several days you get a clean break from the temptations of using drugs, and you also get a clean break away from some of the people who may have had some influence on your drug intake.  Getting this clean break is essential in getting started on your recovery.

Now the whole key to doing well in drug treatment is to take massive amounts of action.  If they suggest that you do something then you do it twice.  If they suggest that you do to a meeting each day then you should probably go to 2 each day.

If they suggest that you get a sponsor in recovery then you should probably get a sponsor and call them every day and pick their brain to the fullest.  If they suggest that you read some literature then you should probably read everything that you can get your hands on.  Get the idea?  Those who do well in recovery are the people who go really big in taking action.

If you want to make a tiny bit of progress in your life and then relapse, then simply take a moderate amount of action.  Do a little for your recovery.  This produces poor results without fail.

If you want to stay sober, then you need to go big.

Good luck