44,000 and Rising......

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p_rehbein

Senior Member
Sep 4, 2013
30,248
6,569
113
#1
Saw this reported on FNC this morning, did a search and found an Article from the Huffington Post about the number of drug overdose deaths in America for 2013.

There has been a drastic rise since 2009, and the trend continues........Maybe it is time to actually find a way to address this issue rather than just during the Campaign Season?

(This is an old Article, but still relevant to what is happening in the U.S.)

By Laila Kearney

NEW YORK, June 17 (Reuters) - Deaths by drug overdose have been on the rise in the United States, with a majority of states recording increases from 2009 to 2013, according to a study released on Wednesday.

Across the country, 44,000 people died from drug overdoses in 2013, more than double the number in 1999, the study by the non-profit group, Trust for America’s Health found. Nearly 52 percent of the deaths were related to prescription drugs.

The number of overdose deaths increased in 26 states in the four years to 2013, the study found, and decreased in only six states.

West Virginia had the highest number of drug overdose deaths per capita in the time period studied, with 33.5 fatalities for every 100,000 people, according to the report, while North Dakota had the lowest, with 2.6 per 100,000.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has declared prescription drug abuse an epidemic in the United States, and all states except Missouri now have drug-monitoring programs.

Over the past year, Massachusetts and other northeastern states have increased the availability of naloxone, a drug that reverses the effects of overdoses caused by opioids, which include pharmaceuticals like Vicodin and illicit substances such as heroin.

While the lifesaving effects of naloxone are difficult to quantify because of the newness of its widespread use, a 2010 review of 188 communities found that it helped reverse more than 10,000 overdoses, the report said.

Drug overdose deaths exceeded motor vehicle-related fatalities in 36 states, it said.

Injuries, including car crashes, homicides, suicides and traumatic brain injury, resulted in nearly 193,000 deaths and are the leading cause of death for Americans ages one to 44, the report said. (Reporting by Laila Kearney; Editing by Lisa Lambert)



 
May 15, 2013
4,307
27
0
#2
The drugs were meant to help them, but instead they are the very things that is destroying them. All psychiatric drugs are stimulants that stimulant the certain glands in the brain or whatever, that produces certain chemicals to ease the mind of a person. But they doesn't know that it is for temporary use only. But the system want to make money and they are saying that it is for long term use only. But once the glands stop producing these chemicals because of being over-worked, that the drugs start not having any effect at all. And now the person doesn't has this drug to produce and the body has been dependent on the drugs to produces this chemicals that it takes time for the body to recondition itself into back making this chemical, but by that time, the dependent has committed suicide or shoot up a school or an theater.
 

p_rehbein

Senior Member
Sep 4, 2013
30,248
6,569
113
#3
HISTORY OF HEROIN by Heroin Awareness Foundation

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[TD="width: 100%"]THE WILD WILD WEST ……

Heroin, (an opium derivative), unfortunately a very popular choice of drug in the American culture today, it didn’t just "show up" in the late 1960’s. Beginning in the late 1800’s opium was fairly popular. They had opium dens scattered throughout the "wild west". It arrived here via Chinese immigrants that came here to work on the railroads. Instead of belling up to the bar drinking whiskey, the cowhand was in a prone position in a candle lit dim room smoking opium. It wasn’t uncommon for cowhands to spend several days & nights at the den eventually becoming physically addicted to the drug. Even though, at the time alcoholism was a bigger problem.

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[TD="width: 100%"]A NEW WONDER DRUG……

A new "wonder drug" was developed in 1810, this new wonder drug, morphine, (also an opium derivative), was eliminating severe pain associated with medical operations or traumatic injuries. It left the user in a completely numb euphoric dream state, and was named after the Greek god of dreams, Morpheus, by F.W.A. Serturner, a German pharmacist. By the mid 1850’s morphine was available in the U.S., and was pretty popular with the medical profession. The benefits of using the drug to treat severe pain were considered almost miraculous by the doctors of the time.

ADDICTION BEGINS TO BE NOTICED……

The addictive properties of the drug went virtually unnoticed until after the civil war. During the civil war the number of people that were treated for their war injuries sky rocketed and tens of thousands of confederate and northern soldiers became morphine addicts. The United States was plagued with a major morphine epidemic in just over 10 years time. Although no actual statistics were kept on addiction, the problem had grown to large enough proportions that it raised serious concerns from the medical profession. Doctors had no idea how to treat this new epidemic.

WAS THIS REALLY THE ANSWER……

The answer to this increasing problem was thought to have been found in the invention of a new drug in Germany. The new wonder drug was called HEROIN, after its German trademarked name. It was imported into the United States shortly thereafter. The instant market to the American doctors and their morphine-addicted patients was that "Heroin was a safe, non addictive substitute for morphine". That’s how the heroin addict was born and has been present in American culture ever since.

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