Saturday, December 31, 2011

Spice is Back.

It's often that people read posts like this from addiction physiology and assume that legalization would solve all the problems, but forget about the huge problem teens are having with Spice and other "legal highs". I can't begin to tell you of all the stories of teens using Legal Highs that soon lead to death and/or 90 days in rehab! Here's the news on Spice from the chemical dependency counseling community

"Just months after Virginia and dozens of other states banned synthetic marijuana, the chemists who make it have found a way to outfox lawmakers.

Spice manufacturers, who spray herbs with compounds that mimic the active ingredient in marijuana, have altered their recipes just enough to skirt the bans and are again openly marketing spice in stores and on the Web. Some users report that the new generation of products could be more potent than the original formulas, which have sickened hundreds nationwide and been linked to deaths.

Spice, commonly sold in colorful packets as “herbal incense,” is smoked to get high. A new National Institute on Drug Abuse study found that it is the second- most frequently used illicit substance among high school seniors, behind marijuana.

Some users have experienced seizures, hallucinations, vomiting, anxiety and an accelerated heart rate, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration.

Virginia, one of about 40 states that regulate spice, in March made it a crime to have or sell spice that contains any of 10 chemicals often used in the mixture. The same month, the DEA issued a 12-month nationwide emergency prohibition on five compounds. Maryland is also considering restrictions, and the D.C. Council is weighing a ban.

But prosecutions of three of the largest spice busts in Virginia — including one in Falls Church — have hit roadblocks because the spice that police seized does not contain banned chemicals listed in state law. Authorities in Florida, Indiana, Illinois and Alaska have encountered similar problems.

“I don’t know whether we are going to be able stay one step ahead of these chemists,” said Richard Trodden, Arlington County’s top prosecutor and a member of Virginia’s crime commission.

In the Falls Church case, police in June raided a tobacco shop near two schools, seizing 1,700 packets of synthetic marijuana. But the 34 spice samples tested from Arabica Tobacco contained only nonrestricted active ingredients, according to court papers.

The case is scheduled to go to court next month, and prosecutors declined to say whether it will go forward. A reporter did not find spice on sale there this month, and an owner declined to comment on the case.

The emergence of spice

Spice caught the attention of law enforcement in 2008 and has exploded in popularity. The mixes, made with the synthetic version of compounds known as cannabinoids, are sold for about $15 to $25 a gram. One Web site advertises “Legal products available for each . . . state!”

A member of the Falls Church School Board, which pushed for the state spice ban, said she is frustrated it remains on the market.

“To the extent that these makers are putting out a product that’s harmful to kids, that’s going to bother me and every other school board member out there,” Vice Chairman Susan Kearney said.

The problem for lawmakers is thorny. There are potentially hundreds of synthetic cannabinoids that makers could substitute for the banned ones — and that is exactly what has happened.

In July and August alone, Virginia’s forensic lab tested 468 spice samples sent by police statewide. Only 101 included banned substances.

Virginia lawmakers anticipated that spicemakers might switch formulas, so they included a provision in the law that controls chemicals intended to act in a similar fashion as the banned ones. So far, it has not led to any prosecutions.

State scientists say they cannot offer testimony to juries to prove reformulated spice is similar to the original versions — not enough is known about the compounds.

“There’s not enough foundational research done on these chemicals on which to base our testimony,” said Linda Jackson, a chemistry program manager for the state lab.

The problems with enforcement come as the substance is exacting a higher toll. Annual calls to poison control centers about spice have more than doubled nationwide, to about 6,300 this year, according to the American Association of Poison Control Centers. In the Washington area, there were 65 calls to the National Capital Poison Center last year and 85 through August 2011.

A recent study found a possible link between spice use and heart attacks in three Texas teens. An eighth-grader in Pennsylvania who had reportedly smoked the drug from a Pez dispenser died in October after a double lung transplant.

In June 2010, David Rozga, an Iowa 18-year-old who had just graduated from high school with a 3.5 grade-point average and planned to attend college, smoked synthetic marijuana, his father said.

Rozga became agitated and told his friends “he felt like he was in hell,” his father said. A short time later, Rozga went home and shot himself in the head. Police implicated use of synthetic marijuana as a factor in his suicide.

“Our whole world was taken out from under us,” said Mike Rozga, David’s father. “We are in a new age of drug dealing when you can walk into a local mall, convenience store or go online and buy this stuff.”

Prepared for the bans

Whatever the dangers, spicemakers were ready for the bans.

Two weeks after Virginia outlawed synthetic marijuana, Hampton police seized 842 packets worth more than $8,000 from Outer Edge Gifts, a Hampton Roads area head shop.

Police said the high-profile bust was intended to send the message that spice was not welcome. Local media photographed seized drugs laid out neatly on a table.

But when the cameras turned away, the case crumbled. Police said forensic tests showed the synthetic marijuana did not contain banned compounds. They never filed charges.

A man who identified himself as the owner of Outer Edge Gifts but declined to give his name said suppliers went so far as to include results of lab tests showing the spice did not have the newly banned ingredients.

“I told the police straight up what we were selling was legal,” the man said. “We had results from a DEA-registered lab.”

A raid in which $10,000 worth of synthetic marijuana was seized from a Newport News hookah bar has not resulted in charges, either. The owner did not return calls, but he told a local newspaper in September that he was selling a new version of spice.

State Sen. Mark R. Herring (D-Loudoun), who wrote Virginia’s spice law, said it has helped educate people about the dangers of the drug and encouraged reputable retailers to stop selling it. But he said that more needs to be done. He said legislation is being written that would add six compounds to the banned list.

Lawmakers on the federal level are also taking a more comprehensive approach by seeking to ban spice compounds, as well as classes of chemical structures on which synthetic marijuana compounds are commonly built.

The initial appeal of spice was as a legal high, but it remains popular because most drug tests will not pick it up and it is readily available from dozens of Web sites.

“We had guys with Pentagon security clearance badges coming in to buy it,” said Alan Amsterdam, co-owner of Capitol Hemp in Adams Morgan. Although he stopped selling spice, he is dubious about efforts to control it.

“The government is one step behind science,” Amsterdam said. “It’s here to stay.”"

By Justin Jouvenal,
Wednesday, December 28,

Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/...HNP_story.html

If you are interested in getting your counselor degree extremely fast to become a chemical dependency counselor, then feel FREE to visit CentaurUniversity.com!

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

The Worst

I honestly hate posting these sad stories about teens and drugs, but awareness needs to be raised! The chemical dependency counseling community has seen many of these posts that include teens either taking drugs or being the victims of somebody elses carelessness. Here's the news...

"ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) - Anchorage police say a 14-year-old girl is in critical condition days after a 26-year-old man injected her with heroin.

Sean Warner is charged with drug-related felonies in the case. Court documents say Warner tried to revive the girl himself and didn't immediately call police.

Police say the girl continued to be treated Tuesday at an Anchorage hospital, where she was taken Friday with a drug overdose. Charging documents say the girl, identified only as J.D., was found to have heroin, cocaine and methamphetamine in her system.

Warner's bail has been set at $90,000.

KTUU reports that Warner's father and a friend dispute the allegations and they say Warner is a Navy veteran who saved lives as a medic in Afghanistan. The two said Warner had struggled since returning from the war."

Source: http://www.myfoxatlanta.com/dpps/news/young-teen-critical-after-being-injecte...

If you are interested in getting your counselor degree extremely fast to become a chemical dependency counselor, then feel FREE to visit CentaurUniversity.com!

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

"The greatest users were Eighth Graders...."

Synthetic drugs are starting to make a comback in the drug world and chemical dependency counseling experts have announced that teens are becoming the primary users. Synthetic drugs are cheap and still easily accessible in some states, while in others it's a felony. Addiction physiology has the story... 

"ANOKA COUNTY, MN (WCCO/CNN) – The annual survey by the National Institute on Drug Abuse shows an alarming trend in the number of teens smoking marijuana and using synthetic drugs. 

"Don't trust it, even something coming even from a tobacco shop or a head shop. It may say it's legal, but don't trust it," said Anoka County attorney Tony Palumbo.

Palumbo sees the growing dangers of synthetic drugs first hand. 

His office was one of the first in the state to prosecute a man for a homicide case in the 2010 mass overdose of the synthetic drug 2-CE, which killed an 18-year-old and sent 11 young people to the hospital.

Once believed as a safe alternative to marijuana, synthetic drugs, such as bath salts, are becoming a growing drug choice among teenagers.

The report also shows that while alcohol and cigarette use has dropped to a 37-year low among teens, daily marijuana use is at a 30-year peak. Additionally, one in 15 high school seniors are smoking pot on a daily basis.

Dr. Gavin Bart, who heads Hennepin County Medical Center's addictive medicine division, is concerned with the growing trend and believes teens should rethink their decisions.

"I think there is this idea that since they are synthetic and maybe have some form of pharmaceutical origin, that they may be safer," Bart said. "That's absolutely not a correct assumption."

Less dangerous, but still a concern, is the growing use of energy drinks among teens. One-third of all teens consume the drinks on a daily basis.

The greatest users were eighth graders, but the report concludes that consumption is down slightly from 2010."

Source: http://www.woio.com/story/16327990/synthetic-drug-use-increasing-among-teens

If you are interested in getting your counselor degree extremely fast to become a chemical dependency counselor, then feel FREE to visit CentaurUniversity.com!

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Bath Salts are Still a Problem.

We all thought that the use of novelty bath salts would never become a problem for the chemical dependency counseling community, but now it's worse than ever! 

Back a few months ago selling these Bath Salts became a Felony in almost every state because of the huge problem the were creating for the United States. People committing suicide, murder, and others literally losing their minds are just some of the things reported from users of these "Bath Salts". The death rate from salts and highs alike it was around 1,000 yearly, but over this past year we have seen more than 4,000 deaths alone from Bath Salts! 

Salt
I too wasn't worried about Bath Salts after the bans, until today. 

Reading through my typical feed of chemical dependency counseling news posts I noticed the word Bath Salts on a post! People are still using and are getting addicted to that menace! 

After seeing that post I just had to take the time to write this and really warn people about the dangers of these almost harmless looking novelty salts! 

Please, if you can, re-post this and let others know about the insane side efffects and dangers of Bath Salts. And next time you see these being sold in a dumpy gas station remember they are a Felony in multiple states! 

If you wish to help people with a Bath Salt addiction or any other type of dependency then please visit CentaurUniversity.com to learn how you can become a certified Counselor in as littler as 6-9 months! 

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Marijuana Use Increases in Teens

Well, the news isn't all bad! As marijuana use has increased dramatically, the use of alcohol has decreased to an all time low, according to addiction physiology studies. The chemical dependency counseling community is continually trying to decrease all these statistics, so play you're part and repost this!  

"LANSING, MICHIGAN — More U.S. teens are using marijuana and see it as less of a risk, while their alcohol use has dipped to historic lows, according to an annual national survey of drug use released Wednesday.

The findings are based on an annual survey of 47,000 teens conducted by the University of Michigan for the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

One of every 15 high school seniors reported smoking marijuana on a daily or near daily basis, the highest rate since 1981.

“One thing we’ve learned over the years is that when young people come to see a drug as dangerous, they’re less likely to use it,” Lloyd Johnston, the study’s principal investigator, said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. “That helps to explain why marijuana right now is rising, because the proportion of kids who see it as dangerous has been declining.”

The study said marijuana use among teens rose in 2011 for the fourth straight year after considerable decline in the preceding decade.

One of every nine students in their last year of school before college reported using synthetic marijuana within the previous 12 months.

The synthetic drug survey question was asked for the first time this year. Fake marijuana, sometimes sold in drug paraphernalia shops and on the Internet as incense, contains organic leaves coated with chemicals that provide a marijuana-like high when smoked.

A Drug Enforcement Administration emergency order banning the sale of five chemicals used in herbal blends to make synthetic marijuana took effect March 1. Many states also have their own laws banning the sale of synthetic marijuana.

White House drug czar Gil Kerlikowske called on parents to get involved to help stop the use of synthetic marijuana.

“It’s not in the vocabulary of parents, and they need to be aware of it so that when they have that conversation about substance abuse that they are knowledgeable and they talk about this,” he told the AP.

Alcohol use continued a trend of decline dating to the 1980s and hit a historic low for the survey, which began in the 1970s.

Other drugs showing some evidence of decline in use this year include cocaine, crack cocaine and inhalants."

Source: http://www.mycentraljersey.com/article/20111214/NJNEWS18/312140024/Teen-marij...|head

If you are interested in getting your counselor degree extremely fast to become a chemical dependency counselor, then feel FREE to visit CentaurUniversity.com!

Monday, December 12, 2011

The Number Keeps Getting Smaller

And I'm not talking about the amount of drug arrests. Just recently I noticed a familier city mentioned on an international News Reporting Website. That city was Lake Elisnore, California. If you live in Southern California then you most likely know the small city, but I bet you didn't know that over 2 dozen students were arrested from the high school just recently. The age that people are getting arrested for drug possession just keeps getting smaller...

I normally wouldn't post a story like this, but it's disheartening to me and the chemical dependency counseling community. These kids now have to pay for their actions for the rest of their lives. Please help warn teens and children of the drugs that are circulating today.

If you want to get more involved then get a counseling degree in costa mesa. Anyways, here's the story...

 

 

"RIVERSIDE, Calif. — 

Authorities say they have arrested two dozen Southern California high school students after a long investigation into drug sales on two campuses.

The Riverside County Sheriff's Department said in a statement that 12 students from Vista del Lago High School in Moreno Valley and 12 more from Elsinore High School in Wildomar were arrested Thursday.

During the investigation authorities say they seized marijuana, cocaine, methamphetamine, ecstasy and the prescription painkiller hydrocodone. They say seven of the students had weapons or drugs at the time of their arrest.

The students' names were not immediately released, and most would not be identified because they are minors.

The Sheriff's Department was assisted by the Drug Enforcement Agency, local police and prosecutors and two regional drug task forces in the investigation."

 

Source: http://www.krmg.com/ap/ap/crime/24-calif-students-arrested-after-drug-probe/n...

 

If you are interested in getting your counselor degree extremely fast to become a chemical dependency counselor, then feel FREE to visit CentaurUniversity.com!

 

 

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

The Most Abused Drug, is Legal?

In this article Pal-item.com talks about how common prescription drug abuse is found in the average American home. It's the killer that comes undetected and has been one of the biggest problems for chemical dependency counseling and addiction physiology.

"The most abused drugs in the United States don't come from south of the border.

 They aren't transported in secret compartments in cars and trucks crisscrossing the country.

And unlike methamphetamine, heroin and cocaine, most of these drugs are created in a safe, controlled environment.

364846738_55bb045925

 

In fact, some of them might be in your medicine cabinet right now.

According to figures released by the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), more than 15 million people in the United States are abusing prescription drugs. That is more than the combined number of individuals abusing cocaine, hallucinogens, inhalants and heroin, the report said.

And the Whitewater Valley certainly has seen an increase in the illegal use and sale of prescription drugs.

"The mindset is that it is a legal drug, so it is OK to use," said Richmond Police Department Det. Jon Chilcoate, who handles the department's prescription drug cases.

Chilcoate said he is working on more cases now than ever involving prescription drugs, and he fears the number will continue to rise.

"It is the No. 1 drug of abuse in the country, and there is no age limit with these drugs," Chilcoate said. "Kids are using these pills and adults are using them. It is happening right here in Richmond."

The danger in abusing prescription drugs also has no limits. The body suffers damage to internal organs from prolonged use of many prescription drugs, and a combination of prescription drugs and the mixing of prescription drugs and illicit drugs such as heroin is also the leading cause of overdoses and overdose deaths in Wayne County.

The Wayne County Health Department reports that Wayne County had 18 overdose deaths in both 2009 and 2010 and has 11 confirmed and six pending overdose deaths this year.

Wayne County Coroner Kevin Fouche said heroin overdoses comprise the majority of deaths by overdose in Wayne County, but in many cases he said the illegal drug was taken in combination with prescription pills.

"We don't have too many overdoses on just pills -- I think less than 10 this year -- and most of them don't result in death," Fouche said. "But what we do see a lot of is people using prescription drugs in combination with illicit drugs and that is a dangerous mixture."

Source: http://www.pal-item.com/article/20111204/NEWS01/112040325/1008/rss

If you are interested in getting your counselor degree extremely fast to become a chemical dependency counselor, then feel FREE to visit CentaurUniversity.com!

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Alcohol and Other Drugs Awareness Hour

I wanted to take some time to repost this to everyone who has attended these Lectures before and those who are interested in Drug Awareness. Things in the chemical dependency counseling community have changed a lot in the past year so now its time to learn more about the drug and addiction physiology research that has been going on.

"The Alcohol and Other Drugs Awareness Hour is celebrating its 36th year with a series of lectures being held from 9:30 to 11:00 a.m.  at the Annenberg Center for Health Sciences on the Eisenhower Medical Center campus.   There is no charge for the lecture series, which begins January 14, 2012.

Following is the schedule of 2012 lectures:

January 14, 2012
Topic:     “LUSH”: The Story of the First Woman in AA
Reading Theater Drama
Written and Directed by Valerie-Jean Hume
January 21, 2012
Topic:         “Stealing My Life Back: One Step at a Time”
Speaker:     Maury Wills
MLB Veteran, Instructor, Los Angeles Dodgers
Rancho Palos Verdes, CA
January 28, 2012
Topic:         “The Law of Attraction Meets Sobriety”
Speaker:    Sherry Gaba, LCSW
Life Coach and Published Author
Los Angeles, CA
February 18, 2012
Topic:         “Intervention: Spiritual vs. Logical”
Speaker:     Ed Storti, CADC
Intervention Specialist, Motivational Speaker, Author
San Pedro, CA
February 25, 2012
Topic:         “The Harder they Fall”
Speaker:     Gary Stromberg
Public Relations and Media Consultant, Published Author
Los Angeles, CA
March 24, 2012
Topic:         “Beyond the Falls: Redeeming the Lost Years”
Speaker:     C.B. Shiepe
Award-Winning novelist: “CLIFF FALLS”
San Marino, CA
March 31, 2012
Topic:         “Back to the Future”
Speakers:   Panel Discussion – Inspiring Stories of Recovery

Alcoholism is the third largest killer disease, after hear tdisease and cancer.  Between one-fourth and one-third of all American families are affected by alcoholism; it is truly a family disease."

Source: http://www.bettyfordcenter.org/recovery/featured-home/2012-alcohol-awareness-...

If you are interested in getting your counselor degree extremely fast to become a chemical dependency counselor, then feel FREE to visit CentaurUniversity.com!

 

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Time to Step Things up Against Ecstasy

For the first time in years ecstasy is reaching new levels of danger and it's time for the chemical dependency counseling community to do something. If you know ANYONE going to a rave/club please take the time to warn them of MDMA and how extremely dangerous it can be. 

"As two more families lose loved ones to drugs, radical measures should be considered.

In the past few days, two families have received the news that every parent dreads – a child has died. Both the young men concerned had attended parties where tens of thousands of young people danced all night to pounding electronic music. Twenty other people were in hospital. The suspicion, not unnaturally, is that drugs were involved. Scotland Yard singled out MDMA for mention – methylenedioxymethamphetamine, which is the active ingredient (sometimes) in Ecstasy tablets.

We do not know what caused these deaths. But we can say this: Ecstasy, or “E”, is creeping back in to fashion after years of declining popularity. The reason is simple: MDMA. It is MDMA that acts on the brain to provide the surging, euphoric “rush” that Ecstasy users seek, and which is accentuated by the pulsing beat and bass notes of dance music.

Here is some background. MDMA has been scarce since around 2002, probably because of a clampdown on the trade in the chemicals needed to make it. Instead, drug dealers started adulterating their product with cheap substitutes, such as piperazines (better known as worming powder). Other common adulterants included designer drugs calledcathinones, or amphetamines or caffeine. Some of these substances are a lot more dangerous than MDMA. But their low cost meant that tablets traded as “Ecstasy” could be sold for as little as £1 or £2 a pill. The effect was weaker, mind you, so many users started to lose interest in E, and turned to alternatives, such as alcohol.

This was the Ecstasy scene for the past decade: cheap pills, made of dodgy ingredients, and taken in large quantities, because they lack potency. Clubbers might take three, four or five in a night.
In the past 12 months, though, stronger E has returned. Traffickers, perhaps having discovered new sources of the precursor chemical, are making tablets with high levels of MDMA again. This variant contains 100 to 200 milligrams of MDMA. Ecstasy this powerful hasn’t been available since the heyday of rave culture, between about 1990 and 2002."

28 Nov 2011
Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/89...f-Ecstasy.html

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