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Warning: This Drug May Kill You Documentary 135

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Perri Peltz
8,2 of 10 stars
Country - USA
genres - Documentary
runtime - 59 Min
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My brother is addicted to opiates all dr prescribed. He keeps coming up with surgeries he needs and doctors do them. http://ilcimoonsans.parsiblog.com/Posts/8/SabreCatHost+cinema+A+President+at+the+Crossroads+original+strea/ 🤔His parents obviously didnt whip him enough for lying when he was a kid. Hes probably been lying his whole life and the lies just got bigger and bigger. 🤨. The worst part is patients have a hard time getting legit prescriptions... https://developerexchange.network/blog/view/1291119/oficialus-herr-und-frau-petry-magnetiniu-jungciu-allucee-91

Born and raised in the current heroin overdose capital of the U.S., I've been very familiar with heroin and opiates my whole life. I saw my best friend's mom pee her pants, saw her passed out with a needle in her arm, her skin blue... Teenage boys I was friends with would prostitute themselves for the drug. And this was in the early to mid nineties. Whatever the intention of the strict opiate laws, which I personally do believe is a combo of well intentioned and politically savvy, it has wreaked havoc in Appalachia and the outlying areas. The addictions and consequences I witnessed as a teenager have compounded and multiplied beyond comprehension. I moved from Ohio to Austin Texas four years ago, but I still get daily reminders of the opiate/heroine epidemic there. People die every day. My neighbor just died yesterday from a cocaine overdose. All of his friends said he did the coke because he couldn't find any Percocets. Not exactly the opiate to heroine story, but along the same lines. The laws they've created in these areas due to the outcry about prescribed opiates have indisputably led to astronomical death, suffering and overdose. As a side note, it's very easy to get prescription narcotics here in Austin. I don't do the drugs, but I'm a bartender and I hear and see what people are doing every day. Despite the ease with which people can obtain opiates here, they aren't interested and there is no market for them. I can't stress enough how easy it is to obtain these prescriptions here. Any college student with the vaguest complaint can get a 3 months supply of multiple opiates and other drugs with no problem. Yet there is no epidemic, no crisis. I lived in Ohio for 34 years. There has always been a drug problem there. But the deaths and the true, staggering epidemic did not happen until they made the opiate laws as strict as they are and cut off the addicts. You can hate it, but it's the truth. It wasn't the answer.

Hello and first: My best (and I realize useless) wishes for everybody out there suffering. Sucks. My medical/pharmaceutical issue centers around the fact that no medicines seem to work at usual strength for me. My pain is mostly moderate and occasionally severe; I understand that. It is also decades long, unrelenting, and now limiting my ability to socialize and perform activities of daily living. At one time, my pain was treated, thank God. I was at the same dose of Vicodin for over 5 years. It didn't treat the pain completely, but oh, well. I never requested an early fill, never asked for a dose increase, and was managing. Then, I was forced to stop taking the opioid. I did this really easily. Now, my function is so badly compromised that the county has seen fit to grant me a caregiver and ~17 hours of help a week. I am EXTREMELY lucky. This is a huge privilege. Honestly, though, I HATE watching someone working at tasks like cleaning and laundry that are my responsibility. I asked her to play with my cat today, I'm so sore. I hate myself. The point is that I was functioning pretty well. However, now the state government is paying someone to do the things I was doing for myself when I had pain management. It's not rocket science to figure out which scenario is less expensive for the taxpayer. wtf.

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30:38 is that a burberry shirt. By definition, if the real incident rates of abuse were 1% they certainly wouldn't be Schedule II. I had a 14 year addiction to pain pills. Fortunately i never had the urge to go to heroin. I doctor shopped, multiple ER visits, bought off the street. Now, I can't say I know of anyone who died from just using pain pills alone. Not saying it doesn't happen, just haven't seen it. Your pill overdoses come from mixing the shit. Pain pills, xanax, and soma together and you're asking to die. Now in April I had a 12 foot fall at work. Broke 7 ribs and lacerated my spleen. Im in constant pain daily, but I still won't use them. Now, it blows my mind how people are bitching about opiates, but don't bitch about how our government guards poppy fields in Afghanistan. And its been under each president since Dubya. I have a major problem when my government makes it even harder to obtain pain relief while importing heroin. Fuck you Bush, fuck you Obama, and fuck you Trump. And BTW John Oliver, pseudo-addiction is very fucking real. Go back to Britain you limey English fuck.

https://developerexchange.network/blog/view/1295785/2017-fikkefuchs Pool Guy He aint no lottery winner, he's a wanker. LMFAO. stop it your killing me... https://ameblo.jp/dokuinshi/entry-12460551502.html The opioid crisis will solve itself when all the dopers die off. People just stood around and let that baby pull on it's thought CPR,they thought take ur phone out U-TUBE. May kill you. It kills everything! I was taken way from my parents twice before i was 3. They were full blown heroin addicts and i was born a dope baby. Eventually they took me for good. they sealed the records and changed my name. I refuse to take any medication because it now to avoid the same fate.

 

Ey this guy had some balls. One of the best documentaries about addiction ive seen. well told and heartfelt stories. http://flategalsap.parsiblog.com/Posts/1/Chris+Coleman%3a+Dare+to+Dream+Gratis+online+Oh%2c+bezuele+Schauspil/

 

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post/6 I had to tell her a lie because she may find out the truth LMFAO😂😂😂😂😂😂 (NO KIDDING. There isn't really much real heroin around anymore, what's causing most of the overdoses are due to it being fentanyl or cut with it. The deepest source of our problems at this particular time is the fact that politicians began attacking the appropriate dispensing of pain killers, for their targeted medical purpose, as a first step in making their constituents happy. First, we need to decriminalize addiction and break from the multiple negative connotations that exist in the minds of those who have never personally experienced it. That is necessary for more people to even admit when they have a problem, much less feel like they can come forward for help. Furthermore, when dealing with a problem that is essentially driven by pain, which can come in an endless range of degrees and forms, adding to the sufferers hardship is a quick and easy way to compound the problem. (For anyone who doesn't quite understand what I mean, a google search of dopamine might help.) Equally important, we need comprehensive reform within the medical community. There are currently NO federal regulations in place which dictate what a rehab facility entails. In fact, documentation seems to imply that there hasn't even been nearly enough research into finding out what sort of foundational regiment would be successful in breaking the bonds of addiction. Without that information to build on, how can we expect to prevent these 30,000 deaths each year? People who have not had to deeply consider these problems on a personal level really have no idea how unfit this country is to support the existing problem, much less prevent more addiction cases. And unfortunately, simply cutting off narcotics from an addict is not just potentially painful and life ruining, it can cause far more dangerous drug seeking behavior and, in the case of some drugs like methadone, dangerous medical problems and even death. Until we have a network of medical support and rehabilitation options for those who are already addicted, that should be our primary focus. Yes, clinics that dole out pain meds created a great portion of the problem, but there are already laws in place for the prosecution of such behavior and, in most states, they were adhered too fairly consistently. As a patient in a pain management clinic, I can attest to the fact that my treatment has always been tightly regulated. However, since Florida gained a reputation as the doctor shopping/pill popping capital of the developed world, politically motivated responses have not only made it extremely difficult for me to get enough medication to manage my chronic injury, illness, and surgery created acute pain enough to function each day, the costs to me and my insurance (read that as everyone else who has to pay the increasing insurance rates) have been continually growing. Still, though I do suffer a degree of physical dependence as is common in long term care, I am not considered an addict. Those who are will not be easily deterred by these changes as most regulations have no effect on methadone clinics or street drugs. In fact, while I was taking 15-20 mgs of methadone each day, a family member has continued to be given 140mgs a day with no changes in the last 8 years to the regulations which impact her access. While insurance companies are now prescribing the use of regular EKGs to monitor the effect of my dose on my heart, there are no such regulations for methadone clinics. They essentially can continue to make their 16 per day per patient without any regulations to force them to take an active role in their recovery. That's not the worst problem though. Rehab facilities are so under-regulated that, if you have become addicted and suddenly find yourself having to face that reality, you may wind up in a place that makes 1500 off your insurance for every urinalysis they give you, every day. That's 2.3M for a facility treating only 6 patients year round. These facilities now have a similar vested interest as methadone clinics in keeping addicts from full recovery because politicians and other non-medical professionals were in charge of overly broad regulations meant to comfort voters rather than cure the epidemic. In many states you don't even need a license to run a rehab facility. Until addiction is viewed with similar gravity and concern as any other medical condition or malady and treated with the same scientific basis in fact as all other medical conditions, any efforts to end this epidemic will continue to fail and likely cause more hardship for those who already suffer greatly.

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