Posts Tagged ‘drug rehabs’

UN Day Against Drug Abuse

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

Each year the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime uses June 26th as the UN’s International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking.  This year the message was “Think Health, Not Drugs.”

The UNODC website provides the World Drug Report and a lot of information and tools for anti-drug campaigns around the world.  This year’s event comes on the heals of news that the number of opiate addicts in Afghanistan have doubled, that drug cartel murders in Mexico have escalated and that prescription drug addiction is causing record overdose deaths in the United States.

As any local, national or international anti-drug campaign must have to be successful, the two main parts include effective drug prevention measures as well as successful drug rehabs and alcohol addiction treatment centers.  Without these, it’s just a war.

Texans Seeking Effective Rehab Help

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

Despite having more than 500 drug rehabs in Texas, only a quarter of them provide rehabilitation services longer than a month, leaving only about 6 percent of the more than 43,000 people receiving help that actually get long-term care. 

It is clear that Texas needs more facilities that provide 90-day rehab programs for drug and alcohol addiction – or longer.  In addition to long-term rehabilitation, other successful components that have been identified include drug-free methods (not prescribing replacement drugs to addicts) and treatments that address the physical symptoms of addiction.

For more information about successful drug rehabs and recovery programs that actually work, call 1-877-372-5719 to speak with a counselor who can help.

New Evidence that More Recovery Programs are Needed Instead of Jail

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University recently issued findings from a study of inmates and substance abuse issues.  The beginning of their release states:

“Of the 2.3 million inmates crowding our nations prisons and jails, 1.5 million meet the DSM IV medical criteria for substance abuse or addiction, and another 458,000, while not meeting the strict DSM IV criteria, had histories of substance abuse; were under the influence of alcohol or other drugs at the time of their crime; committed their offense to get money to buy drugs; were incarcerated for an alcohol or drug law violation; or shared some combination of these characteristics, according to Behind Bars II: Substance Abuse and America’s Prison Population. Combined these two groups constitute 85 percent of the U.S. prison population.”

While experts at addiction treatment centers throughout the country have been pushing for more drug rehabs instead of incarceration, this study presents hard-hitting facts about the correlation between substance abuse and crime in America.

If you or someone you love is in need of an addiction recovery program, contact us today for help.  Call 1-877-372-5719 now.

Insurance Coverage for Drug Rehabs

Monday, February 8th, 2010

Drug and alcohol rehabs both benefit and suffer from labeling addiction as a mental health disorder.  The upside is that the new insurance parity law will force many insuranc policies to pay for drug rehab centers in an equal fashion to other healthcare provided by its coverage.  The downside is that it gets attached to a law that ultimately allows for pharmaceutical companies and ineffective psychiatric-based treatments to continue to bilk billions of dollars from American taxpayers by treating other forms of mental illness because they have convinced lawmakers that they are incurable diseases that require continual treatment.

Addiction recovery shouldn’t be a life-long endeavor.  People are able to recover from alcohol and other drug addiction permanently, with no signs of relapse, and do so every day.  This means that it is clearly not the incurable disease that the afore-mentioned groups claim it to be.  At the same time, drug rehab centers that do have high success rates are able to make themselves available for more people by allowing them to be covered within the same calendar year after they have been unsuccessful at traditional addiction treatment centers.

Addiction Recovery – Big Business?

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

Like with other fields in health care, drug rehab and addiction treatment centers ultimately have to make money somehow to keep operating. Most of these facilities are non-profits, so they don’t make a lot of money, but for those that are for-profit and even some that receive government funding, it can be a major source of revenue. It usually depends on how they view addiction and whether or not they believe that permanent recovery is possible.

High-priced for-profit centers can charge 40K per month and offer a nice place to live and some counseling with plenty of activities and a private chef. Those places are often more like a month-long vacations for relaxation to get away for a bit than true recovery centers that get results.

At the lower end of the spectrum are treatment facilities and counseling programs that accept state and federal money to provide services for people who can’t afford to pay. While this is a much-needed gap to fill, most of these programs actually spend more time on filing the paperwork to keep their contracts than making sure clients remain sober – and it’s totally acceptable since the government thinks addition is an incurable disease – how ridiculous!

Somewhere in between it all, there are successful drug and alcohol rehabs that are able to demonstrate that addiction can be cured and that permanent recovery is possible. These are the programs that we support.

Proposed Ban on Certain Painkillers

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

Exerpt from JoinTogether Online – “A federal advisory panel has recommended that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) ban the painkillers Percocet and Vicodin because of their damaging effects on the liver, the New York Times reported on July 1.

The two popular painkillers combine acetaminophen with a narcotic. High doses of acetaminophen are believed to cause liver damage. The panel noted that, over time, people who take Percocet or Vicodin need to take higher and higher doses of the drugs to receive the same effect.

At least seven other prescription drugs that combined acetaminophen with narcotics also would be banned if the FDA follows the panel’s recommendations.

The FDA asked the advisory panel to meet to address problems arising from the high demand for acetaminophen, which can be found in over-the-counter medicines such as Tylenol and Excedrin. In 2005, Americans bought 28 billion doses of products containing acetaminophen.

Although the medicine treats headaches and relieves fevers, liver damage can be caused in some people even when taking the recommended doses. More than 400 Americans die and 42,000 are hospitalized each year because of acetaminophen overdoses.

The committee also recommended that the FDA reduce the highest allowed dose of the ingredient in over-the-counter products such as Tylenol from 500 milligrams to 325 milligrams and to reduce the maximum daily dosage to no more than 4,000 milligrams.

Johnson & Johnson, the makers of Tylenol, said it “strongly disagrees” with the panel’s recommendations.”…

Gee, no kidding! You have to take more to achieve the same effect? That’s the case with all drugs once an individual starts to build a tolerance to it. Why they would ban these drugs, but not something like Oxycontin, which kills more than 400 people per year, is beyond my comprehension. But then again, not much the FDA does makes sense.

Prescription painkillers have become one of the biggest substance abuse problems in America in recent years. Literally millions of people in this country are addicted to these drugs in their various forms.

However, there is help available. We can assist you in locating successful inpatient drug rehabs that are extremely effective at helping people achieve permanent recovery from painkiller addiction. Call 1-877-372-5719 today for more information.