Sunday, December 31, 2006

Decline In Drug Abuse Hopeful, But More Research, Education Needed

The American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry applauds the 23.2 percent decline in drug use by young people reported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), but calls for more research and education on the impact of youth drug abuse. The Monitoring the Future Study survey of 8th, 10th, and 12th graders shows an illicit drug use decline by 23.2 percent over a five-year period. It also showed that youth prescription drug, and over-the-counter medicine abuse remains high. "This illustrates that education is driving prevention," says Thomas F. Anders, M.D., President of AACAP. "Continued collaboration among parents, teachers, physicians, and mental health professionals is essential to show youth the long-term consequences of using drugs." The AACAP emphasizes the need for the identification and treatment of mental illnesses that often are present in youth who use drugs and/or alcohol.

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Sunday, December 24, 2006

Youths can take different routes to drug addiction

Drug policies in the United States have long been influenced by the idea of a "gateway progression" in drug use, where the use of one substance eventually leads to "harder" drugs. Marijuana is often called a "gateway drug" because many young people who use it later move on to substances such as heroin and cocaine, and the gateway progression has been considered a strong predictor for drug dependency. A new study from the University of Pittsburgh, however, suggests that teens who follow a reverse sequence -- using harder drugs without having first tried "softer" ones, such as cigarettes and alcohol -- are just as likely to develop a drug dependency. In a study of 214 boys, researchers monitored participants' use of tobacco, alcohol, and marijuana over a 10-year period, until they reached the age of 22.

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Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Report ties teen smoking to drug abuse

Young people who smoke cigarettes are much more likely to use drugs and abuse alcohol than non-smoking youth, a new study says. A study of 15- to 19-year-olds by the Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse found a "very strong" association between tobacco use and hazardous drinking, use of marijuana, and other drugs. "What surprised me was the strength of the association," said Chris Davis, one of the researchers for the study. The study found 91% of smoking youth used marijuana some time in the year before the study, compared to 29% of non-smoking youth. Young people who smoke were more likely to binge drink and more than twice as likely to be hazardous drinkers than non-smokers. .

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Tuesday, December 5, 2006

Doherty treated for drug addiction

BRITISH rock star Pete Doherty, the on-off boyfriend of supermodel Kate Moss, is reportedly being treated for drug addiction at a clinic in Portugal. The 27-year-old Babyshambles frontman will have the drug naltrexone, which reduces the craving for heroin, implanted in his abdomen at the clinic at Oeiras, an oceanside suburb of Lisbon, Portuguese newspaper 24Horas reports, citing clinic sources. Doherty arrived in Portugal on Monday and is being accompanied by a British doctor, the paper said. The troubled singer has repeatedly sought treatment for drug addiction before in Portugal as well as at clinics in England, France and Thailand. He was arrested on suspicion of possessing crack cocaine earlier this month after he was spotted driving his Jaguar erratically near his home in East London.

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Tuesday, November 28, 2006

OBNDD Selects SumTotal for Online Curriculum to Stem Drug Abuse

The Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs (OBNDD) has chosen SumTotal Systems' software to build an online curriculum to stem the abuse of drugs, specifically methamphetamines. OBNDD will develop and deliver Web-based courses with SumTotal's learning and content management systems. SumTotal's TotalLMS and TotalLCMS are part of a suite of software products that deliver, analyze and track training over the Internet.

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Tuesday, November 21, 2006

George Michael - Drug Addiction For Real

The former lead singer of Wham hit rock bottom with anti-drug and alcohol prevention groups with his recent comments and his behavior prior to filming the British TV program, The South Bank Show. Comments attributed to Michael included the claim this that his pot-smoking behavior has kept him "sane and happy." The singer made headlines not only with his comments but with film clips that reportedly showed him lighting up a joint before the interview on the British show. Paul Corry of the agency Rethink panned the behavior and was highly critical of the singer. Michael's "comments are stupid and naïve." said Corry. "Cannabis is not a risk-free drug. For a significant minority of people it is a trigger for developing a severe long term mental illness ..." Twice in the last nine months, Michael has been found slumped over in a car seemingly under the influence of some substances.

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Tuesday, November 14, 2006

Judge Hatchett: Child abuse amplified by drug abuse

Television's Judge Glenda Hatchett said the more we talk about child abuse, the better off we are. She visited Wayne State University yesterday to discuss child abuse and its effect on the community. Phyllis Ivory Vroom, Dean of the Wayne State University college of social work, called child abuse an “immense social issue," saying 30,000 Michigan children are victims of mistreatment each year, and 20,000 are in foster care. Vroom also said “children of color" are more likely to be in the child protection system and less likely than white children to be reunited with parents. Hatchett, who not “in her wildest dreams" envisioned becoming a judge, said “these are not just numbers, these are children".

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Thursday, November 9, 2006

Courtney Love Credits Gibson With Her Drug Addiction Recovery

New York, NY (AHN) - Noted actress and rock singer, Courtney Love said on Tuesday that Mel Gibson helped her on her road to recovery from drug addiction. The widow of rock legend Kurt Cobain, who has been sober for 15 months, said Gibson showed up unexpectedly at a Beverly Hills, California hotel where she was in the throws of a drug binge, and coaxed her to seek help. "Mel kept coming to the door with this cheesy grin going, `Hi!'" Love said on Tuesday on ABC's "Good Morning America." "I just kept looking at him going - I can't cuss - um, `Blank off!' ... I know him and he's a nice guy. It didn't matter who it was. It could have been Jesus. I didn't care," she said. The 42-year-old former lead singer for the band Hole, said that Gibson came with addiction counselor, Warren Boyd.

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Tuesday, November 7, 2006

Governor says drug abuse serious concern

Drug and alcohol misuse among young people are some of the most important challenges facing the country, according to H.E the Governor Stuart Jack. He made his comments at the opening ceremony of the two-day Cayman Against Substance Abuse (CASA) youth leadership conference on Thursday 2 November. Co-ordinated by CASAs Youth to Youth section, Mr Jack, along with Youth Minister the Hon Alden McLaughlin, Health Minister the Hon Anthony Eden, CASA leaders, top-level police representatives, corporate-sector supporters, and officials from the Youth Department, National Drug Council, and the care homes all attended. Government is making great effort to make the Cayman Islands what it should be, but there are different leadership situations, from running the country, government, school, family and mentoring friends and classmates, the Governor said.

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Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Drug addiction costing billions of dollars

The fight against drugs comes at a huge cost, but its not even close to what the damage costs are when it comes to drug addiction. Staff Sergeant Ian Sanderson, the RCMP Drug Awareness Coordinator was in Spirit River last week to talk to Central Peace area school kids during the day before closing out the evening with a talk about drug use to parents and community members. It costs us about $3 billion a year for the damage thats caused by alcohol and tobacco in Alberta and nationally were looking at about $48 billion it costs the Canadian economy for illicit drug use, said Sanderson. Thats why he says the argument cant be made to legalize and tax drugs because the province doesnt collect $3 billion in taxes from alcohol and tobacco. It doesnt really matter what the drug is, its the addiction that is the issue, noted Sanderson.

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Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Drug-abuse funds coming to state

Federal drug czar John Walters today is expected to announce a five-year, $14 million grant for emergency rooms and clinics in Denver and southeastern Colorado to identify and help substance abusers before they become addicts. At least one as-yet-undetermined Denver public school- based clinic will be part of the innovative program, officials familiar with the grant said. The plan is to get young abusers treatment and counseling to prevent addiction rather than rely on intervention programs geared toward the addict. "With this major grant, we will partner with Colorado in a meaningful way to prevent the disease of addiction, particularly among our young people," Walter said in a news release detailing today's announcement, scheduled at Denver's South High School. Walters will also announce that three other states - Wisconsin, Florida and Massachusetts - are to receive similar funding, which comes from the U.S.

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Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Theft, drug abuse cases to be given priority: Criminal Court

The Criminal Court has said that it will place special importance on concluding theft, robbery, and drug abuse cases and they will be dealt with much more promptly that usual. Ghazee Abdulla Areef said that an average of 21 cases of these crimes would be dealt with every day to hasten the process. “The number of cases dealt with daily is low because of shorter working hours in Ramazan," said the Ghazee. “So we shall place priority on the cases of those who are under arrest. Those under police custody are those implicated in theft, robbery, and drug abuse." The Ghazee said that the conclusion of the cases was now proceeding at a satisfactory rate. .

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Monday, October 9, 2006

Drug court helps people fight addiction

Efrain Rivera is charged with possession of narcotics, essentially the same crime Bridgeport Mayor John M. Fabrizi has acknowledged committing. But he finds himself in far different circumstances. He's in Bridgeport Superior Court, a few blocks from City Hall, his wrists crossed behind his back as if someone might slap cuffs on him at any second. When seven sweaty guys in baggy jeans and leg irons shuffle in on the way to another courtroom, he looks away fast. He doesn't want to be like them. In the past, Rivera has been charged with possession of cocaine. This time it's heroin. His checkered past raises the stakes: If things go badly he might find himself among more than 700 inmates serving time in state prisons for possession of cocaine or heroin — not dealing or trafficking, just possession.

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Saturday, October 7, 2006

Study Compares Overeating To Drug Addiction

New York, NY (AHN) - A recent study conducted by a team of Brookhaven National Laboratory researchers says overeating is like drug addiction for obese people. The team performed scans on seven overweight people, and the results showed that the areas controlled by satiety were similar to those in drug addicts abusing substances. The researchers analyzed brain impulses in seven overweight individuals. All of them had been fitted with a weight-reduction device called an implantable gastric stimulator (IGS). The device transmits signals that eventually relay satiety messages to the brain so as to reduce one's desire for food. Dr Gene-Jack Wang, at the Brookhaven National Laboratory, New York, says, "As soon as we saw these scans, immediately it reminded me of what we had studied in drug abuse when people were under a craving situation - the same areas in the brain lit up." The experts believe the findings of their study could pave the way for the discovery of new therapies for obesity.

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Friday, October 6, 2006

South Africa: Crackdown On Teen Drug Abuse

THE Tshwane council is drafting drastic bylaws to give Metro cops the power to conduct drug tests at schools, concerts, stadiums, movie theatres and in other public places. This follows last week's announcement by Tshwane Executive Mayor Gwen Ramokgopa that she wanted to implement radical bylaws to combat drug abuse in the city. The initiative will see Tshwane becoming the first city in the country to introduce the bylaws. Mel Vosloo, the Tshwane Metro Police spokesman, said the proposal already enjoyed the support of all political parties. "The levels of drug abuse are far too high. This problem needs to be combated on every level of society." He said the council had established that cinemas, schools, concerts and stadiums were places where drug-use was more prevalent.

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Thursday, October 5, 2006

Drug addiction is disease, not a social stigma, say experts

AMRITSAR: The experts and social scientists who participated in the one-day seminar on "Drug Addiction and Youth in Punjab" were of the unanimous view that drug evil could only be eradicated from the society with the active participation of general masses. Experts said that drug addiction is a disease and drug-addicts may not be considered as social stigma. Today, proper counselling and rehabilitation of addicted patients by the experts is the need of the hour. This seminar on "Drug Addiction and Youth in Punjab" was organized by the students of Guru Nanak Dev University under the aegis of Drug De-addiction and Rehabilitation Centre of the University, here today. Dr. Jai Rup Singh, Vice-Chancellor inaugurated the seminar while Mr. S. Shrivastva, Senior Superintendent of Police, Amritsar, Dr.

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Wednesday, October 4, 2006

ANNA NICOLE SMITH LAWSUIT ALLEGES DRUG ABUSE

LATEST: The photojournalist claiming to be the father of ANNA NICOLE SMITH's baby daughter alleges in court documents that Smith was taking methadone and is hiding out in the Bahamas to keep her baby from being tested for drugs. LARRY BIRKHEAD filed court papers in Los Angeles on Monday (02OCT06), attempting to establish paternity and obtain legal custody of the child. Birkhead began legal proceedings after learning that Smith's close friend and attorney HOWARD K STERN, who she wed in a commitment ceremony last Thursday (28SEP06), is also claiming to be the father. The lawsuit alleges Smith was taking methadone, which is normally used to treat heroin addiction, and that Stern has been facilitating her habit. Birkhead also claims Smith is hiding out in the Bahamas to keep her baby from being tested for drugs.

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Tuesday, October 3, 2006

Iran: Brothers Change The Face Of HIV, Drug-Addiction Treatment

Two Iranian siblings have revolutionized the way drug addicts and HIV/AIDS-infected people are treated in their country. Doctors Arash and Kamiar Alaei were raised in a wealthy family but now devote their lives to helping the less fortunate on the streets, treating them, and counseling them on how to rejoin society and even find a spouse. .

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