Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Holidays, Family, and Intervention

The holidays can be a tough season and if you know someone struggling with addiction then you couldn't give a better gift than recovery. Chemical dependency counseling and treatment are one of the greatest things an addict can recieve. If you would like to learn how to become a chemical dependency counselor yourself then please scroll down. 

"Alcohol related fatalities are 25 and 50 percent higher in the four-day window surround Christmas and New Year’s Day, according to the National Highway Traffic and Safety Administration (NHTSA)."

"If someone you love needs help with a substance abuse problem, don’t wait. The period over Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Years is particularly stressful, and there is an increased risk for substance abuse overdose and death. Talk to a substance abuse treatment center about the different in-patient treatment options available. While no one likes the idea of spending the holidays in a treatment center, this may be the best way to save a loved one’s life.

If your loved one is currently in recovery, help them stay sober during the holiday season. Talk to your loved one’s drug counselor at a substance abuse treatment center for ways you can help support their sobriety.

The holidays are a time for hope, celebration and new beginnings. With your help, a loved one can make a fresh start and overcome a substance abuse problem."

Source: http://www.freedomdrugrehab.com/celebrity-addictions/families-come-together-t...

Today you can be the seeds of change by taking a look into the chemical dependency counseling field. Centaur University offers one of the fastest certification programs to help you become a chemical dependency counselor and start making a difference! 

Monday, November 12, 2012

Prescription Drug Deaths

Prescription drugs continue to be one of America's biggest killers according to chemical dependency counseling and addiction physiology. Some doctors have been linked to many deaths in Southern California. 

"A small number of doctors are linked to a large percentage of prescription drug-related deaths in Southern California, according to an investigation by the Los Angeles Times.

The newspaper found that in almost half of the 3,733 deaths from prescription drugs in four Southern California counties, those who died had a doctor’s prescription for at least one drug that caused or contributed to the death. In many cases, deaths were caused by use of multiple drugs, sometimes prescribed by more than one doctor. In some cases, prescription drugs were mixed with alcohol or illicit drugs."

It's very sad to read these news stories about Doctors that just don't care enough to be more careful with prescriptions. 

"Experts said the findings should lead to closer scrutiny of physicians’ prescribing practices. R. Gil Kerlikowske, Director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, said, “Do I think this has the potential to change the game in the way it’s being looked at and being addressed, both at the state and federal level? Yes, I do.”

Source: http://www.drugfree.org/join-together/prescription-drugs/a-few-doctors-linked...

Today you can be the seeds of change by taking a look into the chemical dependency counseling field. Centaur University offers one of the fastest certification programs to help you become a chemical dependency counselor and start making a difference! 

Monday, October 8, 2012

Treatment in the UK

There's always good news and bad news when it comes to the War on Drugs. Whether it's in the U.S or another Country most of the same problems are analyzed by the chemical dependency counseling community. 

"There has been a 4% drop in the total number of people in treatment for drug use with the number of young adults needing treatment for heroin down nearly two-thirds compared with 2005-06.

Below is more information gathered from the UK addiction physiology community and you can find the source at the bottom of this article. 

"Collecting data on the number of adults on a structured drug treatment in and in contact with drug treatment agencies and general practitioners in England in 2011-12, the numbers shows some key trends in drug treatment.

Main drug of misuse

Opiates and crack cocaine were the most frequently reported drugs of misuse - 84% of adults in treatment cited either one of these. Cocaine powder was reported by 5% of adults and Cannabis was recorded by a further 8%.

Age and gender

The median age of clients who were at their first point of contact in their latest treatment journey in 2011-12 was 35 years old. Over 70% of clients in treatment were male whilst just over 30% of women were aged under 30 years old. There number of over-40s in treatment (61,695) has risen and the age group now makes up 31% of all those in treatment.

Source of referral into treatment

Self referral (40%) was by far the most common source of referral into treatment. Arrest referral and Drug Interventions Programme (DIP)made up 13% whilst GP referrals only accounted for 6%.

Waiting times for treatment

Of the 68,218 first interventions beginning in 2011-12, 97% began within three weeks of referral. For those referred to start another type of treatment, 97% of people began treatment within three weeks.

Treatment type

Over three quarters of people (76%) received prescribing including key working whilst 28% received psychosocial interventions. Over 1,000 people received residential rehabilitation.

Treatment exit

Of the 63,020 adults aged over 18 years old who left treatment during 2011-12, 47% were discharged as a Treatment Completed - meaning the person had completed treatment, was free of drug of dependency and not using either heroin or crack cocaine. The average length of time to complete treatment was 16 months. There were 13,499 people that dropped out or left their treatment and 641 saw their treatment withdrawn."

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/datab...covery-england

Today you can be the seeds of change by taking a look into the chemical dependency counseling field. Centaur University offers one of the fastest certification programs to help you become a chemical dependency counselor and start making a difference! 

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

AA's Long Term Effects

Many people either skip AA meetings by trying to do things on their own and/or don't understand the long term effects and benefits that those meetings can offer.

"Researchers found that recovering alcoholics who helped others in the program had better outcomes in terms of time sober, consideration of others, and long-term meeting attendance." -PsychCentral.com

The chemical dependency counseling community has always supported AA meetings and Sober Living enviorments, but now after this study, it's an essential part of recovery. 

"“Our study is the first to explore the 10-year course of engagement in programmatic 12-step activities and their simultaneous influence on long-term outcomes,” Pagano said.“The AAH findings suggest the importance of getting active in service, which can be in a committed 2-month AA service position or as simple as sharing one’s personal experience in recovery to another fellow sufferer.”" -PsychCentral.com

"This study also found that alcoholics engaged in AAH did more step-work and attended more meetings than those not helping others. In effect, AAH strengthens the commitment to the program that many newcomers have difficulty with in the beginning." -PsychCentral.com

 

Source: http://psychcentral.com/news/2012/09/07/active-participation-in-aa-improves-l...

Today you can be the seeds of change by taking a look into the chemical dependency counseling field. Centaur University offers one of the fastest certification programs to help you become a chemical dependency counselor and start making a difference! 

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Dangerous Ecstasy at Music Festivals

Addiction psysiology has analyzed over the past how dangerous Ecstasy really is and this article goes over how popular this drug really is a musical festivals. People need to be very aware of how dangerous this drug is. 

“Molly,” the powder or crystal form of MDMA, the chemical used in Ecstasy, has been a popular drug at music festivals this year, CNNreports.

Molly, short for molecule, is considered to be pure MDMA, unlike Ecstasy, which generally is laced with other ingredients, such as caffeine or methamphetamine. According to Pax Prentiss, co-founder and CEO of Passages rehabilitation centers in Southern California, molly users tend to be ages 16 to 24.

The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) considers MDMA to be a Schedule I controlled substance, which means it has a high potential for abuse, and no accepted use in medical treatment. The DEA notes that MDMA can cause confusion, anxiety, depression, paranoia, sleep problems, and drug craving. The drug also can cause muscle tension, tremors, involuntary teeth clenching, muscle cramps, nausea, faintness, chills, sweating, and blurred vision. “High doses of MDMA can interfere with the ability to regulate body temperature, resulting in a sharp increase in body temperature (hyperthermia), leading to liver, kidney and cardiovascular failure. Severe dehydration can result from the combination of the drug’s effects and the crowded and hot conditions in which the drug is often taken,” the DEA reports.

While fewer than 4 percent of emergency room visits in 2009 were due to MDMA use, the national Drug Abuse Warning Network found that from 2004 to 2009, there was a 123 percent increase in the number of emergency room visits involving MDMA taken alone or in combination with pharmaceuticals, alcohol or both."

Source: http://www.drugfree.org/join-together/drugs/molly-powder-or-crystal-form-of-m...

Today you can be the seeds of change by taking a look into the chemical dependency counseling field. Centaur University offers one of the fastest certification programs to help you become a chemical dependency counselor and start making a difference!

 

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Report on Treatment Admissions

An interesting report for those involved with treatment and chemical dependency counseling

"A report by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) finds 37.2 percent of treatment admissions for substance abuse involve both drugs and alcohol.

The report shows 730,228 substance abuse treatment admissions in 2009, or 37.2 percent, were for people who reported abuse of alcohol and at least one other drug; 23.1 percent of all people admitted reported abusing alcohol and one other drug, and 14.1 percent said they abused alcohol and two other drugs.

Newswise reports that when people combine alcohol with other drugs, they tend to drink more heavily than if they use alcohol alone. Combining alcohol with other drugs can be dangerous, according to SAMHSA. For instance, taking benzodiazepines with alcohol increased the risk of serious injury or death.

“Even by themselves, alcohol and drug abuse can be devastating to one’s health and well-being, but a combination of drug and alcohol abuse increases one’s risk of serious, life-threatening consequences even more,” SAMHSA Administrator Pamela S. Hyde said in a news release."

Source: http://www.drugfree.org/join-together/addiction/37-percent-of-substance-abuse...

If you want to support recovery and new lives for those who suffer from addiction then think about becoming a chemical dependency counselor from our Costa Mesa Counseling Degree school. 

 

Monday, August 13, 2012

New Law Against Designer Drugs

Another bit of chemical dependency counseling news on a law that will combat more designer drugs. Addiction psysiology has seen many of these "legal-highs" hit the market and the gorvernment is finally doing something about them. 

"The sale of “designer drugs” in Frederick may be illegal in the next few months, thanks to new federal legislation and a possible city ordinance prohibiting the sale of bath salts and synthetic marijuana.
Federal legislation that goes into effect in Oct. 1 is designed to help authorities combat an ever-changing list of chemicals that keeps manufacturers one step ahead of the law, according to Capt.Tom Ledwell of the Frederick Police Department.

The federal law is part of a broader measure targeting many more chemical compounds than a law passed last year. Two bath salt chemicals, mephedrone and MDPV, were banned last October. Health and law-enforcement officials say the drugs lead to bizarre behavior and health problems.

Stemming the tide of such drugs will take a multifaceted effort that may also include a new local law, Ledwell said.

Frederick police have identified six businesses in the city that sell the designer drugs, four of them on Market Street, but suspect there are more. None of the businesses is currently selling anything illegal, according to Ledwell. The drugs are also available on the Internet.

“We are examining some other municipal ordinances already on the books, and whether it would be feasible to put into place in Frederick,” Ledwell said.

He does not know how long it will take the city to enact such a law. He said that the police department has been in discussions with the city attorney and the Frederick County state’s attorney for a few months.

Frederick Mayor Randy McClement (R) said he is supporting the effort to enact a city law to give police tools to address the “growing concern” of designer drugs.

“It amazes me that these drugs are sold with innocent-sounding names like ‘bath salts’ and are used for getting a speed-like rush, not a relaxing soak in the tub,” McClement said.

Joe Cohen, owner of Classic Cigars and British Goodies in Frederick, sells synthetic marijuana, known as “spice” or “potpourri,” but not bath salts. Most of his sales are in small quantities, he said.

Cohen declined comment on pending laws because nothing has changed yet.

“It’s all speculation at this point,” Cohen said. “When something changes, obviously, we will have to adjust. What I sell are legal products.”

Ledwell said that officers have noted “bizarre” behavior in some people suspected of crimes, and have linked some burglaries and thefts to designer drugs.

Officers are seeing behavior-related incidents, but it is a challenge for police to identify what drugs an individual is taking, Police Chief Kim Dine said.

“You would hope they know what they are putting in their bodies,” Dine said.

Synthetic marijuana is similar in construction to tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, the active compound found in marijuana, but is much stronger than the real thing.

And although two compounds found in bath salts were banned last year, the newer compounds are even more dangerous, according to Marty Brown, the deputy director of behavioral health services at the Frederick County Health Department.

“There’s a lot of confusion about the bath salts and what they are,” Brown said. “The folks that have manufactured this chemical compound know they couldn’t get it out on the market unless they could label (it) as ‘not for human consumption.’”

The drugs, which are stimulants, are inconsistent in their effects. The most damaging effects are rapid heart rate, increased blood pressure and paranoia that can make the user suicidal, Brown said.

Other symptoms include teeth grinding, increased temperature and pupil dilation, headaches, kidney pain, ringing in the ears, dizziness, breathing problems and delusions. Most who use it like the euphoric effect it gives them, and some use it as an aphrodisiac, he said.

“I asked someone this morning if he had any experience with it, and his immediate response was this stuff was ‘no joke,’ and he’s used most illicit drugs in his lifetime,” Brown said.

The department runs drug-treatment programs, and sends counselors into schools and to community events to educate people about the dangers of the new drugs, he said. Most of those who use the drugs are between 18 and 25.

“One person we have in a program, a month or so after he smoked it, had the urge to bite someone’s face, and he couldn’t get that thought out of his mind,” Brown said.
There are no studies yet on the effects of long-term use, but users need to take more to get the same high the longer they use it, he said.

Bath salts can be ingested by smoking, or melting them on a spoon and injecting by needle, Brown said. About 3 to 5 milligrams will achieve the desired effect, but users will build a rapid tolerance and have to increase dosage to 5 to 20 milligrams.

The key to dealing with the drugs is to work with manufacturers of the basic compounds and keep them from being sold here, Brown said.

“I am hopeful that there will be more legislation around these drugs,” he said. “That would help us in our efforts to keep young people from doing this stuff. They have enough to worry about as it is.”

by Katherine Heerbrandt Staff writer

Source: http://www.gazette.net/article/20120...mplate=gazette "

Today you can be the seeds of change by taking a look into the chemical dependency counseling field. Centaur University offers one of the fastest certification programs to help you become a chemical dependency counselor and start making a difference! 

Thursday, August 9, 2012

A Woman's Battle Against Prescription Drugs

 

These stories are not uncommon at all in the chemical dependency counseling community and every day there are new people finding presciption drugs to be a real problem. 

"In June of 2008, at 49-years-old, Jamie Lee Curtis admitted to the world that she had become addicted to pain pills at the age of 35. She states that her addiction led her to steal painkillers from her sister, who had them legitimately.

Curtis successfully hid her dependency from her entire family, including her husband, Christopher Guest. She says that she used the drugs to get high, battle loneliness and admits to binge drinking for years. Curtis believes that her dependency issues stemmed from the pressure she felt to stay young and thin in Hollywood. She says that she was finally able to discontinue her drug use nine years ago, due to her concern for her daughter, Annie.

In July of 2009, the buzz around the death of Michael Jackson and painkillers brought Curtis’ drug addiction back to the forefront. She can relate to Jackson, because she became addicted following her own routine cosmetic procedure.

She believes that he was in pain. Jackson was an addict, he wanted relief and would get it any way that he could. She is sure that attempts to intervene were made, but an addict will get what an addict wants, which is relief from the pain in his life. Curtis states that morphine became her warm bath from which to escape her painful reality. She was able to see that her pain had started a long time ago and that finding the narcotic was only a matter of time.

Curtis says that her recovery from drug addiction is the single greatest achievement in her life. She feels that without recovery, her life would have just fallen apart. She continued with, “Recovery and motherhood are the two single greatest things in my life.”

Jamie Lee Curtis Calls For Addiction To Be Considered A Disease

In February of 2012, Curtis refers to Whitney Houston’s death and requests a call to action against drug addiction in society, as well as the Obama administration.

Addiction has become an epidemic. Curtis requests that the Obama administration consider addiction a disease, just like cancer. She feels that the media spotlight on Houston’s death should be utilized to create change.

Gil Kerlikowske, the Drug Czar for President Obama, calls Houston’s death a teachable moment. He also believes that the administration needs to treat addiction as a disease.

Curtis feels lucky that she did not have to lose anything, as some stars have. She says that recovery is accepting that your life is a mess and it has to be changed. Curtis has let her hair turn grey and quit wearing high heels as part of her recovery process. She also works as a volunteer for anti-drug campaigns. If you or a loved one is dealing with addiction, contact us at the Delray Recovery Center today."

Source: http://www.freedomdrugrehab.com/jamie-lee-curtis-battle-with-addiction-to-pai...

You can make a difference in the world today by supporting or becoming a chemical dependency counselor

 

Monday, August 6, 2012

Dealer Arrested From Online Boasting

It's good news for the chemical dependency counseling community and those involved with addiction psysiology to see these sorts of busts happening. Not only is it ridiculous anyone would boast online about drug possession, but it's nice to see authorities taking action because of it. 

"A YORKSHIRE drug dealer who posted a number of amateur rap videos on the internet boasting of his criminal prowess has been jailed for seven years.
Steven Campbell, 38, of Lowerhouses, Huddersfield, who filmed numerous videos of himself posing in a white mask with bundles of cash and bragging about his gang connections and violence, was found to have stashed nearly £100,000 of drugs at the home of a single mother in nearby Dalton when it was raided by police.
He was arrested beside seven others for a range of offences including conspiracy to supply or possess class A, B and C drugs, money laundering and theft, as part of a long-running West Yorkshire Police investigation into drug trafficking and firearm supply which led to 27 search warrants being executed across Kirklees and Calderdale.
Sentencing at Bradford Crown Court yesterday, Judge John Potter said Campbell, a former car dealer who had served prison terms for wounding and robbery in the 1990s, had exploited others including 24-year-old mother Stephanie Harmon who had been unaware of the type and quantity of drugs being left at her home.
“Your activity can properly be described as professional drug dealing leaving a trail of misery and harm in your wake,” he said. “You Steven Campbell, in my judgement, deliberately exploited others and involved them in your activity.”
Prosecutor Richard Walters said the £94,000 drug stash included around £17,000 of cocaine including some packages in a locked strong box which were found to be 77 per cent pure.
Officers also recovered £11,500 of controversial former legal high mephedrone, a bag containing more than 15,000 so-called ‘pink cherub’ tablets, a further 1.75 kilogrammes of the “pink cherub” drug worth more than £26,000 and around 700 grammes of a bulking agent.
Campbell pleaded guilty to conspiring to supply Class A, B and C drugs alongside Stephanie Harmon, of Harp Inge, Dalton, his former partner Harriet Sunderland, 26, of Tillotson Avenue, Sowerby Bridge, and her brother Scott Sunderland 28, of Calder grove, Mytholmroyd.
His three accomplices were sentenced to 51 weeks in prison suspended for 2 years each, with Harmon and Scott Sunderland ordered to complete 450 hours of community service between them.
Christopher Tehrani, for Campbell, said his mother was a social worker and had done her best with her children, but after he left home at the age of 20 he went off the rails.
He said Campbell now had a number of children himself, and wanted to be back with them after his release to make sure they did not make the same mistakes he had.
Speaking outside court, Detective Inspector Neil Hollis of West Yorkshire Police’s crime division, said: “It’s clear from the evidence that Campbell was the leader of this criminal enterprise despite presenting himself as a car dealer. 
“He did buy and sell the odd car, however this was merely a front to legitimise his drug dealing activities. 
“He used his then girlfriend Harriet Sunderland and also Harmon to store the drugs and broker deals for him in order to appear as a legitimate business man.
“Campbell is a negative role model and his prison sentence reflects the severity of his crimes and I hope will be some comfort to those people who have suffered at his hands.”

Yorkshire Post

Published on Friday 3 August 2012
News article can be found here "

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Tuesday, July 31, 2012

DEA Seizes Thousands of Synthetic Drugs

In Texas more synthetic drugs have been seized and this will have an impact on addiction physiology in Texas according to chemical dependency counselors.  

"EL PASO, TX -- Federal agents say more than 300,000 packets of synthetic marijuana, known as "spice" have been seized and 10 persons arrested in Texas as part of a countrywide sweep on processors and distributors of synthetic drugs

Joseph Arabit heads the El Paso sector of the Drug Enforcement Administration. He says 49 search warrants were executed and 5,600 packs of synthetic marijuana were seized in El Paso. In Houston and South Texas, 47 search warrants were served and more than 300,000 packets and about $1 million seized. 

Spice is an herbal product sprayed with a synthetic compound that mimics marijuana's effects. Arabit says product packaging and names suggest they were marketed to minors. 

The DEA says 90 people nationwide were arrested and more than 5 million packets seized in 109 cities. "

AP | Friday, July 27, 2012
Source: http://abclocal.go.com/ktrk/story?se...ate&id=8750513

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Monday, July 30, 2012

Police Seize More Bath Salts

Here's another article to add to the hundreds of others about 'Bath Salts' and the bans/busts that are happening. The authorities are playing their part by making these busts and chemical dependency counselors are helping people who are addicted get over the addiction. 

"SOMERSWORTH — A search warrant executed at a local business by the Somersworth Police Department in conjunction with the United States Drug Enforcement Administration resulted in the seizure of over 2,100 units of synthetic marijuana along with records that indicate sales of over 15 pounds of the bath salt "Amped."

According to a press release issued by Captain David Kretschmar of the Somersworth Police Department, the search warrant, which was executed on July 25 at the Somersworth Village Market on 35 Washington Street, is part of an investigation into the sale and distribution of synthetic cathinoids (bath salts) and synthetic cannibinoids (synthetic marijuana) in the area.

As a result of Wednesday's search warrant, records indicating the sales of these items were seized by law enforcement officials. A preliminary examination of these records indicate that from mid January to May 1 the Village Market received and sold over 15 pounds of the bath salt "Amped." 

The 2,100 units of synthetic marijuana seized Wednesday are estimated to have a total value in excess of $34,000. These synthetic marijuana products will be analyzed by DEA chemists. No timeline has been given for when this stage of the process will be complete.

Also as a part of this investigation, which began as early as February of 2011, investigators from the U.S. Postal Service intercepted two packages on May 4, 2012 destined for the Village Market. A search warrant later obtained by the Somersworth Police Department revealed the packages contained 2,100 units of "Amped."

According to the press release, profits from the packages seized on May 4 would have been in excess of $65,000.

Although no arrests have been made thus far, the investigation is continuing and arrests are expected. 

Thursday, July 26, 2012"
Source: http://www.fosters.com/apps/pbcs.dll...861/-1/FosNEWS

You can make a difference TODAY by inputting energy into recovery by helping others achieve sobriety with chemical dependency counseling. Centaur University wants to help you become a chemical dependency counselor and so you can start changing lives! 

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Betty Ford

The chemical dependency counseling community has seen some great people and one of those is Betty Ford. 

"Betty Ford touched thousands of people’s lives in the most positive and empowering ways.  Her openness in discussing breast cancer and addictive disease made it more than okay for women and men to ask for help.  The Betty Ford Center honors her vision every day.  We keep her memory alive for every family seeking to change their legacy.

Since her passing last July 8, Betty Ford has been eulogized by thousands of people around the world. The conversations Betty began about treatable illnesses continue to this day.  Betty described herself as “… an ordinary woman living in extraordinary times.”

This “ordinary woman” was petite, accessible, funny and determined.  Betty was so proud of the Center and was often on campus meeting with patients.  When she was in the Coachella Valley, she presented a monthly lecture to the patients and endeared herself with remarks like, “I know how to justify addiction.  My prescription bottle said not to operate heavy equipment, and I wasn’t even driving, so there was my green light to do what I wished.”  To the patients and staff – she was simply Betty.

Although the administrative and clinical policies at the Center were important to her, Mrs. Ford’s heart was first and foremost with the patients.  She lived within minutes of the campus and made many after-hours trips to visit with and calm frightened patients who were considering leaving against medical advice.  She also came to the first 25 anniversary celebrations, always available for conversation and reminiscences with former patients and their family members.

As much as she belonged to her family and to the world for her contributions, she belonged to the patients whose lives became whole again after their stay at the Center.  She was often approached by alumni who tried to thank her, and she would gently say, “You did this.  You made the decision to leave that old life, and you deserve everything you have today.”

I join thousands of alumni, current and former Betty Ford Center employees and countless others in fondly acknowledging this “ordinary woman” who left an extraordinary legacy.

You may view the tribute book and add your own reflection if you wish."

Source: http://www.bettyfordcenter.org/recovery/featured-home/remembering-betty-ford.php

Today you can be the seeds of change by taking a look into the chemical dependency counseling field. Centaur University offers one of the fastest certification programs to help you become a chemical dependency counselor and start making a difference! 

Monday, July 23, 2012

Police Seize Over $11 Million Worth of Drugs

It's amazing how random drug busts can be as we've seen in other chemical dependency counseling news, but this one is amazing. Two men were seized along with over $11 Million worth of drugs

"A Bensalem Township police officer on routine patrol with his K-9 dog made one of Bucks County’s biggest drug busts on Sunday, seizing heroin and methampehamine worth $11.7 million, authorities said Monday.

The 15 kilos of heroin and 20 pounds of “very pure crystal methamphetamine” were not earmarked for Bensalem, “but they were earmarked for the Delaware Valley,” township Public Safety Director Fred Harran said at a news conference. 

“I can’t imagine how many lives were saved last night of people overdosing on this stuff,” Harran said, with the plastic-wrapped bricks of drugs lined up neatly in front of him. “There’s a lot of people not going to get high this week.”

The drugs were found after Officer Brian Cowden, a 10-year veteran of the force, pulled over a tractor-trailer with California license plates and registration on Street Road, and his police dog, Edo, sniffed out the narcotics, Harran said.

The driver, Estaban Zalazar Velasco, 35, of Galt, Calif., and passenger, Juan Ledesma-Nolasco, 48, of Livermore, Calif., were arrested and arraigned before District Justice Joanne V. Kline. They were each being held Monday on $1 million bail in Bucks County Prison, on felony charges of criminal conspiracy and the manufacture, delivery, possession and intent to deliver controlled substances.

Cowden “was in the right spot, saw something he didn’t like, and moved on it,” Harran said.

The officer was on an “unrelated detail” at State Road and American Drive when he saw the two men “walking around suspiciously,” Harran said. After they drove off in the 18-wheeler, Cowden noticed several vehicle violations and pulled them over, Harran said.

Edo, a 2 ½-year-old Belgian Malinois trained to detect narcotics, sniffed out the heroin and methamphetamine in the truck’s sleeping compartment, Harran said.

The heroin has a street value of $9 million, and the methamphetamine is worth $2.7 million, Harran said.
The methamphetamine appeared to have come from Mexico, he said. “It’s not typical Pennsylvania methamphetamine.”

Police are still investigating where the drugs came from and the route the two suspects took to Bensalem.

The tractor-trailer was being held in the police department’s impound lot.

“These kinds of drugs are the reasons for the shootings, beating and robberies you see on the news every night,” Harran said. “This is going to put a dent in someone’s business.”

In 2009, Cowden received the county’s Outstanding Police Performance Award from the Citizen's Crime Commission of the Delaware Valley. At that time, he had confiscated more than $500,000 used in illegal narcotics traffic, plus drugs “that were passing through our township for distribution in the Delaware Valley,” according to Bensalem’s newsletter.

Cowden was not available for comment. 

Posted by Bill Reed @ 1:57 PM "
Source: http://www.philly.com/philly/blogs/b...162610616.html

Today you can be the seeds of change by taking a look into the chemical dependency counseling field. Centaur University offers one of the fastest certification programs to help you become a chemical dependency counselor and start making a difference! 

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Alcoholic Help: What You Can Do

If you dont know what you can do for someone is an alcoholic then you need to read this article. It's important to know the options that chemical dependency counseling and addiction physiology offer.

"When a loved one is in trouble because of alcohol or drug abuse, the instinct of family members is to do whatever is necessary to help.

However, that first instinct may not be the one that’s going to be effective.

Following a few simple, organizational steps can make this experience less challenging and hopefully produce a result that leads to inpatient treatment, outpatient care, 12 Step recovery and/or other positive options.

The first step is most important; confirm that the person you want to help truly has the disease of addiction.  Since you are reading this article on the Betty Ford Center website, you must have some suspicions if not proof that the disease of addiction is present.

There are many signs of addiction; here are a few:

  • Gaining or losing weight
  • Lack of attention to hygiene
  • Slurred speech, difficulty with coordination
  • unusual breath, clothing or body odors
  • Changes in friends
  • Last of interest in school/work, missing attendance
  • Financial concerns, possibly involving crimes
  • Furtive behavior
  • Seems paranoid or fearful
  • Dramatic shifts from high energy to lethargy
  • No motivation to carry through on tasks or ideas

Second, make sure you’re knowledgeable about addiction.  There are ample resources online; just a few sites that are helpful are:

Third, make sure that you don’t enter this challenge alone.  If you feel the person you’re trying to help may be reluctant or become belligerent, you may need the assistance of a professional interventionist.  If that’s the case, this person can guide you through specific steps for an optimum outcome.  If you think the person may be receptive to getting help, it’s important that key people in his/her life are all “on the same page” and willing to be supportive throughout the process, whatever that may entail.

Next, be vigilant of your own behavior and make every effort to steer clear of codependency.  This may be your “default” behavior, but you need to take care of yourself.

If you are doing this on your own, select a comfortable, neutral location and share your concerns in a clear way.  Don’t monopolize the conversation; make sure the alcoholic/addict has the opportunity to respond, and make sure your concerns are clearly expressed.  If you are challenged, prepare to mention specific instances that have helped lead to this conversation.

Know going in that you cannot control the outcome.  A popular adage in 12 Step recovery for family members is :  ‘You Didn’t Cause It, You Can’t Control It and You Can’t Cure It.’

Keep in mind that there are options for you to explore as you begin your own recovery; many treatment facilities have a Family Program component, and Al-Anon meetings are available worldwide.

Although the results of your conversation may be far from what you want, you have at least taken action.  You know you’re coming from a place of love and support, and even if your loved one doesn’t see it that way in the moment, that understanding may dawn in the future."

Source: http://www.bettyfordcenter.org/recovery/featured-home/my-alcoholic-needs-help...

Today you can be the seeds of change by taking a look into the chemical dependency counseling field. Centaur University offers one of the fastest certification programs to help you become a chemical dependency counselor and start making a difference! 

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Long Term Recovery

 

This is an interesting article from the Drug Control Policy Director and it's on long term recovery, which is something every chemical dependency counselor will speak about. 

"The White House’s drug czar, Gil Kerlikowske, pictured here with Congresswoman Mary Bono Mack, called for a “paradigm shift” in the nation’s approach to curbing drug abuse during a recent speech at the Betty Ford Center.

Mr. Kerlikowske, director of the White House’s Office of National Drug Control Policy, pushed for expanded access to long-term recovery programs across the country.

He also advocated reviewing thousands of state and federal laws that often hurt recovering addicts trying to rejoin society.

“This country hasn’t looked at recovery in a way that makes a lot of sense,” Kerlikowske, a former Seattle police chief, told an audience mostly of addiction scientists gathered at the renowned treatment center, co-founded by former first lady Betty Ford in 1982.

Recovery was “kind of an afterthought” and “often overlooked,” he said.

As the one-year anniversary of Ford’s death nears, Kerlikowske asked the millions of Americans living in recovery to help reduce addiction’s stigma by sharing their struggles publicly.

“The country needs to hear your stories. It also needs to hear your setbacks,” he said.

“The more we talk openly on substance abuse, the better we can actually treat it.”

There are some 38,000 state and federal laws that hurt many who’ve already served their penalty for drug-related crimes by putting stable housing, student loans, drivers licenses and other essentials out of reach, Kerlikowske said.

He also touted a federal voucher program that recovering addicts use for counseling, transportation, transitional housing, child care, work clothes and other services to stay clean and sober after treatment.

Some $30 billion has been spent on such programs in the past three years, Kerlikowske said.

“The federal government should expand access to a drug-free life and not diminish it,” he added.

The policy speech reflected the different approach Kerlikowske takes compared to his drug-czar predecessors, in an office mostly associated with the nation’s so-called “war on drugs.”

“The day he arrived to become part of the (Obama) administration… he really changed the dialogue,” Betty Ford Center CEO John Schwarzlose told the audience.

“All of a sudden treatment, prevention and education became the key focus — and it always hasn’t been the case in that office.”

Kerlikowske hopes his “third way” approach, advocating neither full- blown drug legalization nor an emphasis on arrests and incarcerations, can make a difference curbing drug abuse.

His message was new to many of the global scientists who attended Monday. They were already in La Quinta for the College on Problems of Drug Dependence conference.

Kerlikowske’s focus on recovery is something they’ll take back to Vietnam, Iraq, Israel and other nations represented at the annual conference, said Rick Rawson, a University of California, Los Angeles professor and CPDD member.

“I bet for two-thirds of the people in that room … it’s the first time they’ve heard about it that way,” Rawson said.

Kerlikowske described Ford as a “recovery champion, unafraid to break taboos and speak about issues that affect the lives of millions.”

Michael Banyard a 45-year-old recovering addict who’s struggled with cocaine abuse most of his adult life, appreciated the drug czar’s speech.

In recovery, “serving others is so important,” said Banyard, adding that he’s been sober 11 months while living and working at a transitional shelter in Los Angeles’ Echo Park neighborhood.

His life hasn’t been easy, but having the chance to work through his problems with his family’s help — instead of sitting in jail — has been a huge boost to his recovery, Banyard said.

Palm Springs Republican Rep. Mary Bono Mack, who co-chairs the Congressional Caucus on Prescription Drug Abuse, introduced Kerlikowske on Monday and said the nation urgently needed to reform its drug policies.

“We’re losing this battle,” Bono Mack said. “Washington needs to change its thinking.”"

Source: http://www.bettyfordcenter.org/recovery/featured/long-term-recovery-advocated...

Today you can be the seeds of change by taking a look into the chemical dependency counseling field. Centaur University offers one of the fastest certification programs to help you become a chemical dependency counselor and start making a difference with addiction physiology

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Roche Under Drug Investigation

More news for the chemical dependency community and warning to watch out for drugs from a company called "Roche". 

"One of the world’s biggest drug companies is at the centre of an urgent investigation after failing to disclose reports that 15,000 people died while taking its medicines.Swiss pharmaceutical giant Roche failed to pass on a further 65,000 reports of suspected side effects that were recorded by patients.All of the reactions took place in the United States over the past 15 years with medicines used to treat breast cancer, bowel cancer, hepatitis B, and skin and eye conditions.

There is no evidence so far of any direct link between the problems and the drugs – but medicines watchdogs say they are taking Roche’s failure to disclose possible concerns ‘extremely seriously’. The drugs involved include Herceptin, given to about 10,000 breast cancer patients in Britain, and Lucentis, which is used to treat about 20,000 UK patients a year with age-related vision loss. The NHS pays Roche millions of pounds for these treatments every year.

The extent of the failings were discovered when the UK medicines watchdog, the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), carried out a routine inspection of Roche’s drug safety procedures at its headquarters in Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire.

The company has now been ordered by the MHRA and the EU-wide regulator, the European Medicines Agency, to investigate immediately each of the total 80,000 deaths and side effects reported. Both agencies said they were ‘taking action’ over Roche’s failures.

All of the deaths and possible adverse reactions were reported by patients who rang a call centre run by Roche’s US subsidiary Genentech. Staff there failed to pass on the reports to Roche’s drug safety team – but it is not known why.

Professor Sir Kent Woods, chief executive of the MHRA, said: ‘Patients should continue to take their medicines because our investigation has currently found no evidence of a safety risk to patients.
‘Roche’s actions are unacceptable and our investigation has identified that its reporting systems are inadequate. We are taking urgent action to ensure that these are rectified by Roche as a matter of priority. We will take action to ensure that patients are protected now and in the future.’
All of the deaths and possible adverse reactions were reported by patients who rang a call centre run by Roche’s US subsidiary Genentech. Staff there failed to pass on the reports to Roche’s drug safety team – but it is not known why.
Roche, which made profits of £6.3 billion in 2010, has a legal duty to examine every suspected side effect and report them to regulators around the world so that potential safety concerns can be investigated.
This means that each side effect reported to the patient support call centre should have been immediately sent to the safety team to be assessed. These must then be sent to regulators – within 15 days for the most serious reactions – even if no link between the drug and the reaction be proved. Some of the call centre’s records, which date back to 1997, are said to have been noted down on paper and kept in boxes. The European Medicines Agency, which made the findings public, said: ‘There is at present no evidence of a negative impact for patients and while the investigations and being conducted there is no need for patients or healthcare professionals to take any action.’

However, a spokeswoman added: ‘It’s not often we make statements on such findings, so we do take this incredibly seriously. The numbers are huge but we’re not talking about confirmed reactions. 
‘Some might not be related, and some may have already been reported to the regulators via other mechanisms – for example directly to us by doctors.’ But she added: ‘We cannot rule out that additional safety concerns could be discovered.’

When asked if legal action could be taken against Roche, she said: ‘We are looking at all options. There are penalty regulations and they could be fined.’

Other drugs being examined include Avastin, used for bowel and breast cancer; lung cancer medication Tarceva; Rituxan, which treats non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma; the stroke drug Alteplase; Actemra for rheumatoid arthritis; Pegasys for hepatitis B; and Raptiva for the skin condition psoriasis. If any new safety concerns emerge after examining the data, regulators could decide to withdraw the drugs or change their guidance to doctors.

In a statement, Roche said: ‘Patient safety is of paramount importance to Roche. We acknowledge the concerns that can be caused by this issue for people using our medicines.
‘The non-assessment and non-reporting of these adverse events was not intentional and we are taking comprehensive steps necessary to address the findings of the MHRA inspection. We have provided initial estimates of missed adverse events and are in the process of confirming the final number.
‘We expect to complete all activities related to these programmes as soon as possible.’


Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...#ixzz20Dtk6VWh

Today you can be the seeds of change by taking a look into the chemical dependency counseling field. Centaur University offers one of the fastest certification programs to help you become a chemical dependency counselor and start making a difference!