Women can help in fighting drug menace

Posted on October 2, 2011, Sunday

Women can help in fighting drug menace

THANK YOU: Syed Mohd Junaidi (second right) receives a token of appreciation from Wong while Sharifah Mariam looks on during the seminar ‘The Roles of Women in Combating Drug Menace’.

SIBU: National Anti-Drugs Agency (AADK) is enlisting women for their new programme ‘Masyarakat Wanita Antidadah’ (Mawadah) to fight the drug menace.

Giving an awareness talk during the seminar ‘The Roles of Women in Combating Drug Menace’, AADK Sibu branch rehabilitation officer Dalin Nani George said the agency was galvanising women’s support for early intervention to keep their families safe from it.

Going beyond the conventional method, women are engaged under the newly rolled out Mawadah programme, and they can help keep their children’s behaviour in check, given their multi-functions at home.

She recalled a tragic incident where a 13-year-old girl from a broken family got hooked on drugs, ruining her future in the process.

“Women are more patient and have multiple roles as homemakers, mothers, spouses and sisters, allowing children to be closer to them.  Children find it more convenient to talk with their mother rather than father, and this is where they can apply the early intervention method.

“They can play an effective role in Mawadah, disseminating information on the dangers of drug. This will go a long way for youngsters to shun drugs, including safeguarding them from being duped into becoming drug mules,” Dalin told those present at a hotel here yesterday.

The seminar was jointly organised by Pemadam Sibu district and ‘Pertubuhan Kebajikan Islam Malaysia’ (Perkim) Sibu branch, and participated by various NGOs.

She was optimistic that equipped with better awareness about the dangers of drugs, children would be better able to resist being influenced by bad hats or coaxed into becoming drug mules.

Recently, Deputy Foreign Minister Datuk Richard Riot was quoted in a newspaper report to have said his ministry was concerned about the number of Malaysians caught overseas with drugs brought in from the country with or without their knowledge. He said up to March 31 this year, 11 Malaysians were arrested in China alone.

Dalin revealed that the membership for Mawadah here is about 300 people here,

Cautioning that when early intervention was not applied, the drug menace could ruin an entire family, she revealed that the target groups were community leaders, mothers, grandmothers, female relatives, sisters, family members and female counsellors among others.

Earlier, she revealed the presence of a one Cure and Care 1Malaysia Clinic in Sarawak to help those besieged by drugs problem.

Besides Sibu, there was one AADK office each in Kuching, Miri and Bintulu.

Sibu District Officer and Pemadam chairman Wong See Meng in his speech, called for more such programmes to be rolled out.

“This will help create heightened awareness on the dangers of drugs and the grave consequences associated with them,” Wong said.

Among those present were state Pemadam executive secretary Syed Mohd Junaidi Wan Zawawi and its Sibu executive Pemanca Sharifah Mariam Syed Junaidi.

 

– Next Entry >>

Read more http://www.theborneopost.com/2011/10/02/women-can-help-in-fighting-drug-menace/

Eastday-Over 35,000 drug users treated in rehab centers: ministry

BEIJING, Oct. 1 — Judicial authorities have set up 59 provincial-level rehabilitation centers and treated more than 35,000 drug users in these centers through the country’s efforts to curb drug-related crimes and maintain social stability.

The centers receive substance abusers who enter voluntarily or are forced into treatment, said Chen Xunqiu, vice minister of justice.

The centers are exploring ways to help drug addicts break their habits, recover from psychological or mental problems and better integrate themselves back into society, Chen added.

In addition to treating addiction, the centers offer psychological consultation and vocational training to patients, according to the ministry.

Altogether, these centers have about 7,000 beds, 202 doctors and 141 psychologists, with about 5,000 substance abuse patients currently receiving treatment.

The number of registered drug users in China neared 1.4 million as of the end of 2010, according to figures from the Ministry of Public Security.

Read more http://english.eastday.com/e/111002/u1a6134159.html

Death of Gay Mormon Spurs Activism

Bryan Egnew grew up in an observant LDS family in Arizona, the fourth of ten children. After graduating high school, he attended Brigham Young University, served a proselytizing mission in France, and then married in an LDS temple. He became the father of five children. He served in his local LDS congregation. He did everything that was asked of him.

And over the course of more than twenty years, Bryan slowly came to terms with the fact that he was attracted to men. Six years ago, Bryan confided his attraction with a friend he’d known since BYU days. Jahn Curran was a fellow Mormon, a father, and someone who’d also come to terms with his own homosexuality a few years earlier.

Jahn offered Bryan a listening ear, and some practical advice. When Bryan called a few months ago, saying he could keep his situation from his wife no longer, Jahn told him, “Be prepared to fight a legal battle. Get a lawyer. My wife was very upset with me. I was in the hallway of my house on my knees pleading with her for understanding. She yelled and screamed at me. She left the next day and never came back, and withheld the kids from me for months. She claimed that I was not a fit father unless I repented. I have spent thousands of dollars in court to preserve my relationship with my kids.”

The reaction, Jahn says, was much the same when Bryan sat down with his own wife to confide in her. She also became very upset. And she packed the five kids (ages 6 to 16), moved them across state lines from the family’s home in North Carolina to Tennessee, and initiated legal proceedings to prevent Bryan from seeing them. She also contacted the bishop in her local Mormon congregation and “confessed Bryan’s sins for him.”

Within two weeks, Bryan was excommunicated from the LDS Church. From the perspective of Mormon doctrine, his excommunication severed Bryan’s relationship to his children not only in this life, but also in the hereafter.

Alone in his home in North Carolina, Bryan was devastated. His parents flew out to be with him, then brought him back to Arizona for intensive treatment for depression.

After a few weeks of therapy, Bryan convinced his parents and his therapist that he was stable enough to return home to North Carolina, so he could look after the family home. Back in North Carolina, on Saturday, September 10, Bryan bought a gun at Wal-Mart. He fed the family’s animals, cleaned the house, handed the keys to a neighbor, sent a message to a family member that they needed to come to the house, and then went on the front lawn and shot himself.

News of Bryan’s suicide immediately circulated on the LGBT Mormon grapevine, where some voices expressed concern that publicizing the death would exacerbate strain on relationships within Bryan’s family as they tried to come to terms with the loss of son, husband, and father.

But the story became public. And now, advocacy groups are mobilizing around Bryan’s story to demand that LDS Church leaders do more for gay Church members.

Within gay Mormon communities, there is debate over whether focusing on gay suicides actually works to change Mormon hearts and minds.

But in the wake of Bryan’s death, many Mormons—LGBT and otherwise—are reflecting on the kind of support our communities are capable of offering gay Mormons who feel they can no longer hide their sexuality.

I’ve heard LDS Church members ask whether excommunication is the best institutional response to gay Mormons in acute spiritual struggle or crisis. I’ve also heard Mormons reflect on how despite some signs of increased awareness and outreach by top LDS leaders, messages of understanding and compassion are not getting down the line to local congregations.

Every time a gay Mormon interacts with a local pastoral leader, he or she faces what some Mormons describe as “priesthood leader roulette.” Mormonism has a lay clergy, and the administration of the Church depends almost entirely on local volunteers who vary widely in their knowledge, experience base, and dispositions. For every local leader who acts out of love and inspiration, there is a local leader who sometimes acts out of a lack of knowledge, repulsion, or fear.

Compounding the situation are the many stories Mormons have been told and told ourselves about what it means to be gay. We’ve been taught that it is an abomination—the choice of selfish individuals. We’ve believed that same-gender attraction is comparable to a disease like alcoholism, or to pornography addiction—an unhealthy compulsion to be battled and overcome. We’ve bought into the idea—and many Mormons still do—that it is possible to change one’s sexual orientation through various therapies, or marriage, or prayer and fasting. We’ve been led to believe that equal rights and protections for same-sex couples constitute a threat to our religious freedom.

But do any of these serve the thousands upon thousands of young Mormons who are coming to terms with their attraction to people of the same sex? Do any of these prepare non-gay Mormons to respond to gay sons and daughters, husbands and wives, mothers and fathers, or fellow Latter-day Saints?

How does it feel to be the LDS parents of a gay child in a culture where unthinking people feel they have divine sanction to verbally abuse and discriminate against homosexuals?

How does it feel to be a volunteer pastoral leader with little training or understanding of LGBT issues facing a married Mormon man confessing that he is gay?

How does it feel to be a Mormon woman who has been taught from childhood that the primary achievement of her life will be a temple marriage to a worthy LDS man, and who is then confronted by the fact that her husband is gay?

How does it feel to be an LDS man who has done everything that has been asked of him by his religion, but who finds himself during the most difficult spiritual season of his life immediately cast out by excommunication and cut off from his family—his wife and children—now, and for the eternities?

Can any human being bear so much? Can this religion we love do any better?

As members of the LDS Church prepare for one of the Church’s worldwide General Conferences this weekend, Bryan’s friend Jahn hopes Church officials will offer stronger, more compassionate guidance and leadership on LGBT issues.

Jahn remembers that it was a year ago this weekend that Elder Boyd K. Packer gave a controversial General Conference talk shaming homosexuality.

“I have a brother who said to me on the phone last Christmas, ‘Elder Packer says God does not make gays. This is your choice.’ And then he used some very hurtful language with me,” Jahn relates. “I had to hang up on him. But he feels he has been given permission to speak this way by the prophet.”

“Even a simple phrase uttered by a General Authority can give Church members broad permission to look down on, discriminate against, or not entertain more compassionate ways of thinking about homosexuality,” Jahn continues. “For many years, I’d sit in General Conference and plead with God that this would be the session that one of the General Authorities would get up and say that treating LGBT people without respect is not becoming of a Mormon.”

May this weekend’s Conference bring some kind of strength to all those who love and care about Bryan–including his family, LGBT Mormons, and the families of LGBT Mormons around the world.

Read more http://www.advocate.com/News/Daily_News/2011/10/01/Death_of_Gay_Mormon_Spurs_Activism/

Alcohol one of worst drugs for health

Most people manage to drink moderately, but for others alcohol can lead to mental and physical health concerns.

According to a survey by the Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse, nearly 80 per cent of Canadians aged 15 years and older drink alcohol in moderation and without harm, while 17 per cent are considered problematic drinkers.

Problematic use occurs when alcohol causes a problem in five areas of a person’s life: physical health, mental health, families and friends, work and education, and legal areas.

Heidi Furrer, adult addiction counsellor with SHARE Family and Community Services, said alcohol is one of the worst drugs when it comes to physical health.

Alcohol can damage the liver and pancreas, she said. It can also lead to heart disease and muscle deterioration.

“It affects the muscles, ulcers, impotence, impaired memory, and then there’s fetal alcohol syndrome in newborns,” Furrer said.

“It can also cause a lot of problems, which we see recently because a lot more people take prescription drugs. In combination with prescription drugs, it can cause all kinds of problems.”

Alcohol combined with anti-anxiety medications can be a deadly combination, she said. In addition, alcohol can counter the effects of anti-depressants, since alcohol is a depressant itself. As such, alcohol use can also lead to mental health problems.

“Alcohol is a depressant so long-term use will increase depression. Alcohol affects a person’s sleep and can cause anxiety when you withdraw from it. Alcohol is a downer, so it depresses the central nervous system,” Furrer said.

“If a person keeps it a secret or a person wants to stop but cannot, then you’re moving from social drinking into drinking that is attached to emotions. … When people use it as an emotional crutch, not just to be social and have fun, then it moves from recreational to problematic use. “

On April 1, B.C. became the first Canadian jurisdiction to recognize alcohol addiction as a chronic medical condition. The aim is to emphasize preventative measures while giving family doctors more resources to treat patients with alcohol problems.

“It takes a bit of stigma away from a person who says, ‘It’s a moral issue. You just have to have willpower,’” Furrer said.

“It’s a step up from the moral model to the disease model.”

Each area in B.C. has a government-funded agency that offers help for alcohol problems. Services can include individual and group counselling sessions, detox, rehab and out-patient clinics.

“We believe that recovery is individual,” Furrer said. “There are many paths to recovery.”

-ÊSHARE Family and Community Services offers adult and youth addiction services to Tri-Cities residents. For more information, call 604-936-3900 or visit www.sharesociety.ca.

www.twitter.com/JenniferMcFee

© Copyright (c) Coquitlam Now

Read more http://www.delta-optimist.com/travel/Alcohol+worst+drugs+health/4661638/story.html?id=4661638

Punjab sets up drug prevention board

Chandigarh, Oct 1 (IANS) The Punjab government has set up a Punjab Drug Prevention Board to curb the growing menace of drug addiction in the state, an official said here Saturday.

To be headed by the state chief secretary, the board will have 10 members, including senior bureaucrats, health, police, excise and taxation officials, the state government spokesperson said.

Outlining the objectives of the newly set up board, the spokesperson said it would initiate concerted efforts to prevent drug supply, treat and rehabilitate drug addicts, and would launch anti-drug addiction awareness programmes.

‘Apart from these, the board would also chalk out a comprehensive state action plan to control drug addiction effectively,’ he added.

Drug addiction is prevalent in several parts of Punjab, especially in the rural areas.

Most of the drug supply is believed to be from across the state’s 553-km long border with Pakistan.

Read more http://in.news.yahoo.com/punjab-sets-drug-prevention-board-145550888.html

Guide for Addiction Specialists Gets Boost from Burning Tree

[ [ [[‘a world of lies and false hope’, 20]], ‘http://news.yahoo.com/photos/iran-sentences-2-american-men-to-8-years-in-jail-1313849049-slideshow/’, ‘Click image to see more photos’, ‘http://l.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/a8g0GeKOu.6BNxnQ3ued4g–/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9aW5zZXQ7aD0zNzI7cT04NTt3PTUxMg–/http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/News/ap_webfeeds/8529d1c495abcf15f90e6a7067007df0.jpg’, ‘512’, ‘ ‘, ‘AP’, ], [ [[‘Conrad Murray’, 15]], ‘http://news.yahoo.com/photos/dr-conrad-murray-on-trial-in-jackson-death-1317135792-slideshow/’, ‘Click image to see more photos’, ‘http://l.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/OcnZ1oL8b35HJTX7lYEc_g–/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9aW5zZXQ7aD00MDI7cT04NTt3PTYzMA–/http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/News/ap_webfeeds/fa85fed941f16915f90e6a706700f31e.jpg’, ‘630’, ”, ‘AP’, ], [ [[‘she-devil’, 12]], ‘http://news.yahoo.com/photos/amanda-knox-1309358621-slideshow/’, ‘Click image to see more photos’, ‘http://l.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/wEKL_fXhCYWc.LCTamCTkQ–/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9aW5zZXQ7aD0yOTk7cT04NTt3PTQ1MA–/http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/News/Reuters/2011-09-26T135037Z_01_BTRE78P12GI00_RTROPTP_2_CNEWS-US-ITALY-KNOX-EVENTS.JPG’, ‘450’, ”, ‘Reuters’, ], [ [[‘diana nyad’, 13]], ‘http://news.yahoo.com/photos/u-s-swimmer-nyad-begins-swim-across-florida-1312776343-slideshow/’, ‘Click image to see more photos’, ‘http://l.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/prkREWxb4pKoOEJPbofPGA–/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9aW5zZXQ7aD0zODQ7cT04NTt3PTYzMA–/http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/News/ap_webfeeds/b662d816a5dfd315f90e6a70670000e6.jpg’, ‘630’, ”, ‘AP’, ], [ [[‘Joshua Komisarjevsky’, 10]], ‘/photos/connecticut-home-invasion-trial-1316719606-slideshow/’, ‘Click image to see more photos’, ‘http://l.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/A1N8mGB5Dh811ytFRPmjhA–/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9aW5zZXQ7aD00NTk7cT04NTt3PTYzMA–/http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/News/ap_webfeeds/ec21b03eeea50514f90e6a70670007ca.jpg’, ‘630’, ”, ‘AP’, ], [ [[‘CASCO Signal’, 13], [‘Yu Yuan station’, 13]], ‘http://news.yahoo.com/photos/shanghai-subway-trains-crash-1317124688-slideshow/’, ‘Click image to see more photos’, ‘http://l.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/hPUVHzepCJiFHzudiNhNVw–/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9aW5zZXQ7aD00NTk7cT04NTt3PTYzMA–/http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/News/afp.com/TRHkg5396284.jpg’, ‘630’, ”, ‘AFP’, ], [ [[‘It is difficult to assess how many birds are affected’, 7]], ‘http://news.yahoo.com/photos/sweden-hit-by-substantial-oil-spill-1316444749-slideshow/’, ‘Click image to see more photos of the oil spill’, ‘http://l.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/Ii9HcyoayObiPRmw7Ik4PQ–/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9aW5zZXQ7aD00MjA7cT04NTt3PTYzMA–/http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/News/Reuters/2011-09-18T165741Z_01_STO04_RTRIDSP_3_SWEDEN.jpg’, ‘460’, ‘341’, ‘Reuters/Erik Abel/Scanpix Sweden’, ], [ [[‘Andy Rooney’, 9]], ‘http://news.yahoo.com/photos/andy-rooney-leaving-60-minutes–1317174717-slideshow/’, ‘Click image to see more photos’, ‘http://l.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/pMvL4lFxAn54rFTcZ0xwcA–/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9aW5zZXQ7aD00MjA7cT04NTt3PTYzMA–/http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/News/ap_webfeeds/b4cf0a91be6cfd15f90e6a706700f8ed.jpg’, ‘630’, ”, ‘AP’, ], [ [[‘villages where people are trapped under collapsed houses’, 8]], ‘http://news.yahoo.com/photos/6-9-quake-strikes-india-nepal-1316432147-slideshow/’, ‘Click image to see more photos of the quake aftermath’, ‘http://l.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/ArZHT7_ugJNvdNZr7rXg7A–/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9aW5zZXQ7aD0zNDA7cT04NTt3PTUxMg–/http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/News/AFP/photo_1316422839782-8-0.jpg’, ‘512’, ‘340’, ‘AFP’, ], [ [[‘The absence of Borders is going to be felt across the industry’, 6]], ‘http://news.yahoo.com/photos/last-borders-bookstores-close-1316449248-slideshow/’, ‘Click image to see more photos of the closing of the last Borders’, ‘http://l.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/B__uksKyx_HwEP3gUum2qA–/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9aW5zZXQ7aD00MzM7cT04NTt3PTYzMA–/http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/News/ap_webfeeds/aed64c8a04652215f90e6a706700965e.jpg’, ‘460’, ‘313’, ‘AP/Amy Sancetta’, ], [ [[‘Anders Behring Breivik’, 8]], ‘http://news.yahoo.com/photos/norway-attacker-anders-behring-breivik-1311602377-slideshow/’, ‘Click image to see more photos of the confessed mass killer’, ‘http://l.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/_E5OB1E6rdgShUt41KVZaw–/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9aW5zZXQ7aD00ODk7cT04NTt3PTYzMA–/http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/News/Reuters/2011-07-25T141034Z_01_SIN725_RTRIDSP_3_NORWAY.jpg’, ‘460’, ‘357’, ‘Reuters/Jon-Are Berg-Jacobsen/Aftenposten via Scanpix’, ], [ [[‘like there is no way out’, 9]], ‘http://news.yahoo.com/photos/the-faces-of-poverty-real-lives-real-pain-1316453315-slideshow/’, ‘Click image to see more photos’, ‘http://l.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/OlSRGp1pKLgvYSpy6XCRkw–/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9aW5zZXQ7aD0zOTM7cT04NTt3PTYzMA–/http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/News/ap_webfeeds/45d7db4304d12415f90e6a706700ca26.jpg’, ‘460’, ‘ ‘, ‘AP/Robert F. Bukaty’, ], [ [[‘including snipers picking off protesters from rooftops’, 5], [‘Violence has flared anew in Yemen in frustration’, 6]], ‘http://news.yahoo.com/photos/yemen-slideshow/’, ‘Click image to see more photos of unrest in Yemen’, ‘http://l.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/UUZ_CmgwS6mLf75U4D9flA–/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9aW5zZXQ7aD00MjA7cT04NTt3PTYzMA–/http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/News/ap_webfeeds/ea314f80041a2115f90e6a706700681f.jpg’, ‘460’, ‘ ‘, ‘AP/Hani Mohammed’, ], [ [[‘Dolores Hope’, 7]], ‘http://news.yahoo.com/photos/dolores-hope-dies-at-age-102-1316466341-slideshow/’, ‘Click image to see more photos of Dolores’, ‘http://l.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/PVmQlI81830Gw1RqCrESFA–/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9aW5zZXQ7aD02MzA7cT04NTt3PTUxNg–/http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/News/ap_webfeeds/4ca0b51519923d15f90e6a70670063b1.jpg’, ‘460’, ‘ ‘, ‘AP’, ] ]

Read more http://news.yahoo.com/guide-addiction-specialists-gets-boost-burning-tree-140215617.html

Pain pills and heroin ravaging the suburbs

CHICAGO — Hurt in a car crash, a Geneva, Ill., woman got hooked on the painkiller Vicodin. When one doctor stopped prescribing it, she got it from others. She was sneaking around so much, her husband thought she was cheating, said her counselor, Jake Epperly.

The face of drug addiction, experts say, is increasingly white, suburban and upper-middle class. New users include older adults seeking relief from pain and teens looking for a high.

Prescription medications represent the greatest epidemic in drug abuse since crack cocaine ravaged cities in the 1980s and 1990s, said Epperly, owner of New Hope Recovery Center in Chicago and Geneva.

Statistics tend to back him up. Deaths from prescription drugs tripled nationwide from 2000 to 2008 and exceeded deaths from heroin and cocaine combined, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The deaths reached an all-time high of almost 37,500 in 2009, the tipping point in an ongoing trend recently reported by the Los Angeles Times: For the first time, drugs killed more people in this country than car crashes.

Heroin and prescription painkiller abuse are intertwined, experts say. The two are similar enough that addicts who run out of one may take the other as a substitute.

Users often start on prescription meds because they are easily available and considered safe. Once hooked, they may move on to heroin, which is now easier to try because it’s pure enough to snort or smoke rather than inject, Epperly said.

Both types of drugs have something else in common: They are depressants that kill by suppressing breathing, particularly when mixed with alcohol or other downers.

And the most common way teens get started on prescription pills, according to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), is through the home medicine cabinet.

Though the war on illegal drugs has been hotly debated in recent months, prescription-drug abuse involves a product that is legal but controlled — and deadly when misused.

The DEA estimates that 1 in 6 people younger than 20 has tried prescription drugs to get high.

Jack Riley, special agent in charge of the DEA’s Chicago division, said he’s alarmed that drug cartels are starting to supply street gangs with prescription drugs. And the gangs are sending members to doctors to fake ailments and get prescriptions.

“It’ll take educators, parents and law enforcement to go after people involved in prescription-drug abuse — just like we’re going after the Mexican drug cartels — because they’re doing that much damage,” Riley said.

A drug dealer is no longer just someone standing on a street corner, law-enforcement officials say. Instead, he or she may also be a doctor or pharmacist, even a package delivery driver — regardless of intent, or whether he or she is even aware of what’s happening.

In June, an Aurora, Ill., man pleaded guilty to conspiracy to illegally deliver drugs through a package delivery company. Prosecutors said Steven Immergluck, 35, a sales representative, and others recruited a pharmacy and doctors to write and fill prescriptions for an Internet drug provider. They then delivered the goods nationwide to customers’ homes.

Through just one of multiple schemes, prosecutors alleged, the defendants delivered 35,000 packages and made almost $500,000.

Similarly, a Calumet Park, Ill., man was charged in September with illegally diverting the painkiller hydrocodone from the Skokie pharmacy where he worked, the DEA reported. Earl Newsome, 57, is accused of selling some 700,000 pills with an estimated street value of up to $7 million.

Among users, Bill Stelcher, a retail salesman from Hoffman Estates, knows firsthand how prescription drugs can ruin a life.

Wracked with back pain, Stelcher, 44, had surgery in 2000. For three years, he lived with excruciating pain and took a succession of painkillers, including Vicodin and OxyContin.

He was taking 30 to 40 pills a day and stayed in bed most of the time, but a pain-management clinic kept renewing his prescription, he said. Follow-up surgery finally fixed his back, but by that time he was hooked, he said.

Five or six times he tried to quit on his own, going through painful withdrawal, but he ended up back on the painkillers, he said.

“The drugs completely take over,” Stelcher said. “It was killing me. If I’d had it my way, I would have been dead.”

His wife got him into rehab, and he has been clean for almost seven years, he said.

“There are places you can get help,” he said. “It will bring life back. You can smell and taste and see things again differently.”

In Will County, the recent focus is on the troubling rise of an old scourge: heroin. A decade ago, the county had five or six heroin deaths a year, with most victims men in their 40s.

In recent years, the number of deaths has nearly quadrupled, to more than two dozen annually. More victims are in their teens and 20s, as John Roberts learned.

Roberts, a retired Chicago police officer, had moved his family to what he thought was a safe community in south suburban Homer Glen.

Two years ago, his son Billy, 19, tried heroin, Roberts said. The teen was put into rehab, then monitored closely to keep him from other users, he said. His son went to meetings but didn’t think he needed them because he wasn’t an addict, Roberts said.

The teen turned up dead at a friend’s house, he said.

“I thought I’d seen a lot and knew how not to become a victim,” Roberts said. “It’s like, ‘How is this happening?’ “

In response to such tragedies, Will County officials started HELPS — Heroin Education Leads to Preventive Solutions. The program, launched this summer, will use TV commercials and public speakers at schools and churches to warn about drug abuse.

Signs of opiate drug use include pinpoint pupils, too much sleep, too little motivation, unexplained absences and worsening grades, counselors say.

Parents need to keep their prescription drugs away from children and throw them out when they’re done with them.

More generally, the Roosevelt University researchers recommend drug education for young people, increased funding for treatment and overdose prevention.

They also recommend some limited protections for those who call 911.

Overdose victims die needlessly, health advocates say, because their friends are afraid they’ll get arrested if they call for help.

In memory of his son, Roberts is pushing for a new law to give drug users immunity from prosecution if they call for emergency help.

Washington state already has such a law in effect.

Read more http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/health/2016371330_heroinburbs02.html?syndication=rss

Young drug addicts want to recover, but need that helping hand to succeed

Washington, Oct 1 (ANI): Young adults undergoing addiction treatment are willing to make the personal changes to recover, but need help and guidance during treatment to be able to achieve that, according to a new study.

“This study suggests that strong motivation to change may exist from the get-go among young adults with severe addiction problems entering residential treatment, but the know-how and confidence to change come through the treatment experience,” said co-author of the study John F. Kelly, Ph.D.

Analysis focused on 303 young adults, age 18-24, attending multidisciplinary, Twelve Step-based residential treatment for alcohol or other drug addiction.

The study measured the subjects’ levels of change during treatment in key areas, including motivation, psychological distress, coping skills and commitment to participation in mutual support groups such as Alcoholics Anonymous or Narcotics Anonymous. Self-efficacy, or a young person’s confidence to stay clean and sober, was also assessed.

Researchers found that the young people in the study were quite motivated to do well in treatment but lacked the confidence, coping skills, and commitment to AA that are critical to longer-term success.

They then came to the conclusion that treatment appears to work by increasing their confidence and ability to make and sustain healthy, recovery-related efforts.

The findings suggest residential treatment provides the boost that the young people need.

The study has been published in the journal Drug and Alcohol Dependence. (ANI)

Read more http://in.news.yahoo.com/young-drug-addicts-want-recover-helping-hand-succeed-121843126.html

Residential treatment may motivate young adults with addiction for recovery

Young adults undergoing addiction treatment arrive ready and willing to make the personal changes that bring about recovery, but it’s the help and guidance received during treatment that build and sustain those changes, according to a longitudinal study published electronically and in press within the journal Drug and Alcohol Dependence. The study was conducted collaboratively by the Center for Addiction Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School and the Butler Center for Research at Hazelden.

“This study suggests that strong motivation to change may exist from the get-go among young adults with severe addiction problems entering residential treatment, but the know-how and confidence to change come through the treatment experience,” explains John F. Kelly, Ph.D., of the Center for Addiction Medicine who authored the study with Center colleagues Karen Urbanoski, Ph.D., and Bettina Hoeppner, Ph.D., and Valerie Slaymaker, Ph.D., of the Butler Center for Research at Hazelden.

Analysis focused on 303 young adults, age 18-24, attending multidisciplinary, Twelve Step-based residential treatment for alcohol or other drug addiction. The study measured the subjects’ levels of change during treatment in key areas, including motivation, psychological distress, coping skills and commitment to participation in mutual support groups such as Alcoholics Anonymous or Narcotics Anonymous. Self-efficacy, or a young person’s confidence to stay clean and sober, was also assessed. Assessments were made at treatment intake, mid-treatment, at discharge and three months post-discharge.

Read more http://www.news-medical.net/news/20111001/Residential-treatment-may-motivate-young-adults-with-addiction-for-recovery.aspx

The fantastic Flann O’Brien

The Irish Times – Saturday, October 1, 2011

FINTAN O’TOOLE

Brian O’Nolan was born 100 years ago on Wednesday. As the man behind Flann O’Brien and Myles na gCopaleen, he could have been a celebrated national treasure – but he was far too radical for that

IN THE POOR MOUTH, Flann O’Brien’s devastating parody of Gaelic-language autobiographical peasant narratives, the hero is alone at night on the seashore when he hears a terrible, unrecognisable sound. He is then assailed by “an ancient smell of putridity which set the skin of my nose humming and dancing”. He eventually sees a huge black quadruped like a giant hairy seal with legs. The following day he tries to describe the beast to his grandfather, who asks him to sketch it. The contours of the terrible creature, called the Sea-cat, appear in the text of the novel.

It is a map of Ireland turned on its side, the four major peninsulas acting as legs, the bulbous sweep of the north-eastern shoreline forming the head. In a footnote, the “editor” of the cod-memoir tells us that “it is not without importance that the Sea-cat and Ireland bear the same shape and that both of them have all the same bad destiny, hard times and ill-luck attending them.”

The ancient smell of putridity that emanates from this half-comic, half-terrifying embodiment of Ireland is not unrelated to the stink of “history’s ancient faeces” that, according to the narrator of Samuel Beckett’s First Love (written five years after The Poor Mouth in 1946) largely constitutes “the charm of our country”. If Beckett and O’Brien shared a great deal besides their belief that something was rotten in the state of Ireland, the overwhelming difference between them is that Beckett, like the majority of their literary contemporaries, managed to flee from the Sea-cat. O’Brien, almost alone among the great writers of 20th century Ireland, fell into its clutches. He stayed in Ireland and paid a fearful price in frustration and neglect.

Flann O’Brien was born into a culture of lingering, post-revolutionary dissolution. As with Beckett, his genius was to find energy, both comic and grotesque, in that entropy. The great ferment of change in the early years of the 20th century had resulted rather anti-climactically in a small, impoverished state, culturally philistine and sexually repressed, its energies drained by exhaustion and mass emigration. WB Yeats died in 1939, a month before the 27-year-old Brian O’Nolan, using the pseudonym Flann O’Brien, published his astonishing first novel, At Swim-Two-Birds . James Joyce’s last work, Finnegans Wake was published in the same year.

Frank O’Connor, writing in 1942, claimed that it was impossible to write a normal social novel in Ireland: “the moment a writer raises his eyes from the slums and cabins, he finds nothing but a vicious and ignorant middle-class, and for aristocracy the remnants of an English garrison, alien in religion and education. From such material he finds it almost impossible to create a picture of life. . . a realistic literature is clearly impossible.”

If realistic literature is impossible, the writer’s options are stark: stay quiet or invent something new. O’Brien and Beckett chose the option of making a new literature of lingering dissolution.

At Swim-Two-Birds has a strong claim to be one of the founding texts of literary postmodernism. All the markers of that baggy but indispensible cultural category – the deconstruction of narrative, the replacement of nature by culture, an ahistoric sensibility in which tropes and genres from different eras can be mixed and matched promiscuously, the prominence of pastiche, the notion of language itself as the real author of the work – are openly declared in At Swim.

This is a book that begins by questioning why a book should have just one opening, and proceeds to give us three. It is a book by a man (Brian O’Nolan) who invents an author (Flann O’Brien) who is writing a book about an unnamed student narrator who is writing a book about a man (Dermot Trellis) who is writing a book. The narrator openly declares that “a satisfactory novel should be a self-evident sham” and that “the modern novel should be largely a work of reference”, since virtually all characters have already been invented. Its governing caprice is that fictional characters do in fact already exist, have independent lives and are capable of revolting against the author. The novel is a treasure house of brilliant pastiches of everything from Gaelic sagas and Irish folkloric narratives to the Bible, Victorian encyclopedias, scholasticism, pub poets, cowboy novels and trashy thrillers.

Frederic Jameson suggests that “postmodernism is what you have when the modernisation process is complete and nature is gone for good”.

There could be no better illustration of this condition than O’Brien’s other major novel, The Third Policeman . Its narrator is trapped in an entirely literary Hell, from which nature is indeed gone for good, and the world is a large machine controlled with levers and knobs by strange policemen. Even the purest of natural phenomena, light, is not natural at all but “light of a kind rarely seen in this country and. . . possibly manufactured with raw materials from abroad.”

Yet – and this may account for his relative critical neglect – O’Brien does not sit easily with postmodern theory. His ideas and idioms cannot be explained, as such theory would like to suggest, as responses to the conditions of “late capitalism”. O’Brien was not responding to the completion of the project of industrial modernity, but to its failure.

He lived and worked in a largely agricultural country that was struggling to impose an ideal of cultural and economic self-sufficiency that cut it off from the mainstream of capitalist development. He poses a critical dilemma that can be resolved only by seeing his dazzling novels as paradoxical products of the conditions of mid-20th century Ireland. The paradox is that what made those conditions so strangely fruitful was the collapse of any notion that a novel could be a direct representation of the society in which it was written.

IF THE THIRD POLICEMAN GIVES US O’Brien’s vision of Hell, what is his Heaven? It is the state of lying alone in one’s own bedroom, cut off from the social world except for the occasional visit of a like-minded butty. “What is wrong with most people,” says the dilettante intellectual Byrne in At-Swim, “is that they do not spend sufficient time in bed” – a version of Blaise Pascal’s statement, used as an epigraph for the late, minor O’Brien novel The Hard Life, that all the trouble of the world comes from not staying alone in one’s room. And what does one do in bed? In a peculiar triumph for the puritanical literary censorship that deformed Irish culture during his lifetime, the bedroom in O’Brien is the locus, not of sex, but of writing. Secret and unbridled instincts are played out, not in the flesh, but in the word.

In this, O’Brien turns to advantage the great agony of being an experimental writer in post-revolutionary Ireland: indifference. In another culture, Brian O’Nolan would have made a perfect Establishment intellectual. He was a government official of relatively conservative disposition. His family background was fully in tune with the new State’s major cultural project: the revival of Irish, which he spoke and wrote superbly. O’Brien was steeped in Gaelic legend and folklore.

O’Brien ought to have been a treasured mainstream figure in nationalist Ireland, a dazzling writer, working within the State apparatus, who could synthesise Gaelic and English, ancient lore and contemporary Modernism.

Yet he was an extraordinarily marginal figure. His journalistic alter ego, Myles na gCopaleen, was celebrated in intellectual circles, but both his official and literary careers were disastrous. A combination of his gradually deepening alcoholism and his habit of making derogatory remarks about senior politicians in his newspaper columns led to his forced retirement from the civil service in 1953. (He departed, recalled a colleague, “in a final fanfare of f***s”.) More significantly, Irish literary culture, constrained by censorship, had little place for his staggeringly original novels.

O’BRIEN WAS DEEPLY DISILLUSIONED by the philistinism of the official nationalist culture. The Gaelic language revival is unmercifully burlesqued in The Poor Mouth . A German scholar receives a PhD in Berlin for his recordings of what he thinks is a native speaker, but is in fact a pig. The tendency of Gaelic writers to give themselves flowery pen-names is parodied in the nom-de-plumes of the writers the narrator encounters, among them The Bandy Ulsterman, The Sod of Turf, The Gluttonous Rabbit and Popeye the Sailor.

The Puritanism and narrowness of the official culture meant not just that O’Brien could not embrace it, but that it could not embrace him.

His scorn for the purists who saw in Gaelic and in traditional customs a barrier against modernity was boundless. “I do not think”, he wrote “that there is any real ground for regarding Irish dancing as a sovereign spiritual and nationalistic prophylactic.” He was too utterly Irish to be easily appreciated abroad and too contemptuous of official forms of Irishness to be comfortably placed at home.

Of his three important works, At Swim met with the enthusiastic approval of Graham Greene and James Joyce – it was the last novel he ever read – but got largely puzzled reviews, sold poorly and was swallowed up by the outbreak of the second World War. The Poor Mouth was published in Irish, a language with fewer readers, and was appreciated largely as a brilliant in-joke. And The Third Policeman was rejected in 1940 by the publishers, Longman’s, who explained that they wanted O’Brien to become less fantastic and instead he had become more so. Humiliated, O’Brien put about the story that the manuscript of the novel had been lost. This was, at least metaphorically, true: the novel was not published until 1967, after O’Brien’s death, by which time he had cannibalised it for the vastly inferior The Dalkey Archive .

Yet, if the conditions of post-revolutionary Ireland doomed O’Brien to neglect, they also forced him into fabulous invention. Sometimes, to take the most direct example, O’Brien’s jokes are a direct burlesque of the official censorship that disallowed any mention of sex. In At Swim, the narrator mentions student societies at his university: “Some were devoted to English letters, some to Irish letters, and some to the study and advancement of French language” – the final comic circumlocution arising from the inadmissibility of “French letters”, the colloquial term for condoms.

There is, in The Third Policeman , a parody of the kind of trashy sex scene that would undoubtedly have fallen foul of the censors, were it not for the fact that the object of desire is not a woman but a bicycle. The narrator slavers over “the prefect proportion of its parts. . . How desirable her seat was, how charming the invitation of her slim encircling handle-arms, how unaccountably competent and reassuring her pump resting warmly against her rear thigh!”

The banning of almost every serious Irish contemporary novel also created the strange literary culture in which O’Brien revelled, one in which officially approved reading was narrowed to theological reflections, Gaelic sagas and peasant narratives while the thirst for contemporary stories was slaked by imported cowboy stories and cheap crime thrillers.

O’Brien’s main novels draw much of their humour from the absurd conjunctions implicit in this unlikely mix. At Swim sets heroic and folkloric figures (Finn MacCool, Sweeny, The Good Fairy, The Pooka MacPhellimey) literally alongside the cowboys Slug and Shorty. The Third Policeman draws on detective stories and science fiction as well as Catholic theology and mediaeval Gaelic literature.

More importantly, O’Brien’s novels draw their dark energy from the sexual repression that lay behind the censorship. They are remarkable for the almost complete absence of either the nuclear family or healthy sexuality. Instead of being merely desolate, however, this absence of family and sexual fulfilment is linked to O’Brien’s great conceit in At Swim – that of literary creation as the male substitute for giving birth.

Writing is sex for an all-male, sex-averse society. Its children are conceived without all the bother and awkwardness of having to deal with women. In the bedroom that is the world of his narrators, congress with oneself generates the only life that is available – the life of words and stories.

Read more http://rss.feedsportal.com/c/851/f/10845/s/18f9f8d6/l/0L0Sirishtimes0N0Cnewspaper0Cireland0C20A110C10A0A10C122430A50A620A730Bhtml/story01.htm