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Drug Facts & Resources

July 14, 2008

Enabling Quiz

Are You Enabling an Alcoholic or Addict?

Often well-meaning efforts to help someone with an alcohol or drug problem actually empowers them to continue their destructive behavior by allowing them to avoid the consequences of their actions. This is called "enabling."

The following questions are designed to help you decide whether or not your actions and reactions to the alcoholic might be enabling. Although the questions refer to an "alcoholic" and "him" you can substitute "addict" and "her" because the principles are the same.

Take the Enabling Quiz now

By Buddy T.,  About.com

July 11, 2008

Cocaine Addiction Could Be All In Your Genes

How likely you are to becoming a cocaine addict could well depend on your genetic make up, say researchers from the Institute of Psychiatry. Some people have a gene variation which stops the production of a protein that regulates dopamine in the brain.

The researchers said that if you have two copies of this gene variation, your chances of becoming addicted to cocaine are 50% higher.

To read the full article, please go to:
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/39415.php

July 10, 2008

Eating Disorder Recovery in Female Athletes

Experience and Strength with Eating Disorder Recovery in Female Athletes
Kimberly Dennis, MD 

Eating disorders and disordered eating are commonly experienced by female athletes, but sorely under recognized by coaches, teachers, parents, therapists and physicians. I use the term disordered eating to include sub-clinical eating disorders as well as eating disorders which meet full DSM-IV-TR criteria for anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, eating disorder not otherwise specified, and binge-eating disorder. There are several core features of the illness of eating disorders, which may be particularly exacerbated in the athletic arena for females.

Denial is one core feature of eating disorders and other addictive processes. In my clinical experience, the level of institutional denial of eating disorders in athletes exceeds that of non-athlete females with eating disorders. The fire of denial can be fed by coaches who rely on the exceptional talent and extreme drive for success that many athletes possess to win games, titles, awards, etc. When a female athlete is still winning or competing and ill, it may be easier to disavow an active problem with food or eating.

Another character trait that has been shown by clinical research to be abundantly present in patients with eating disorders is perfectionism. Competitive athletes rely on precision and "perfect" execution of planned movements, behaviors, training rituals in order to succeed and win.

Competitiveness itself is another trait commonly seen in individuals with eating disorders. Finally, the psychosexual implications of being a female may also contribute to the increased prevalence and risk of disordered eating among female athletes. Most athlete role models are men (with the exception of aesthetic sports such as dance, cheerleading, synchronized swimming). The female athlete may feel more pressure to masculinize her body and become more muscular. She may also seek to avoid menstruation, with its inherent cyclical fluctuations affecting our bodies and moods, since stability, consistency, and control are important for athletic performance and success. The triggering of such traits and their perceived importance in successful athletes are a set-up for female athletes with genetic, familial, psychosocial predispositions for eating disorders.

Co-occurring addictive use of performance enhancing substances, anorexigenic substances, and family histories of addiction or eating disorders can add to a female athlete's risk of developing an eating disorder. Prevention, early detection and appropriate intervention are essential to avoid long-term health consequences such as osteoporosis, cardiac problems, digestive problems, neurological sequelea and death.

Early Detection - what to look for: 

  • increased concern about body composition, body fat;  
  • increased concern about "healthy eating" and rigid behavior around food (eating fat free, not eating certain food groups, eating alone or in isolation);  
  • social withdrawal, loss of intimacy or closeness with peers and family members;  
  • rapid weight loss or gain; going to the bathroom after meals;  
  • unmanageability in other areas of life (school, relationships, substances/intoxication);  
  • loss of menses or irregularity of menses.

Tips for women on how to avoid eating disorder behaviors while training: 

  • exercise and train with a partner or in groups with other women (avoid isolation and secrecy around exercise and food);   
  • replenish fluids and follow a well-balanced food plan (including enough protein, iron, calcium, and fat intake);
  • get guidance and help from a sports nutritionist;  
  • contact your physician if you begin to experience menstrual irregularity or lose menses;  
  • take 1-2 days off per week;  
  • avoid looking at "calories burned" displays on cardio equipment;  
  • seek professional help if you start to experience unmanageability in your eating, exercise, or weight and/or body concerns;  
  • avoid using diuretics, laxatives, stimulants, steroids for performance or training enhancement;  
  • women with histories of eating disorder: continue to receive maintenance care from a professional, continue to attend 12-step recovery groups for people in recovery from eating disorders.

Tips for coaches and school administration:

  • provide education around prevention and recognition of eating disorders particularly to staff and coaches for female athletes;
  • provide education around prevention and recognition of eating disorders to female athletes;  
  • make appropriate treatment recommendations for athletes who are suspected of having an illness;  
  • work with treatment team professionals to set clear expectations around necessary recovery parameters to resume or maintain athletic participation;  
  • foster a culture of safety around the athlete asking for help and expressing concerns about weight;  
  • allow for and enable a female athlete to express when a training schedule feels like too much or feels too intense;  
  • be part of the solution, rather than part of the problem (denial, shaming, etc.).

If you think you have an eating disorder, please seek help from a treatment professional, school counselor, coach, parent and/or 12-step meeting for eating disorder recovery such as Eating Disorders Anonymous or Overeaters Anonymous. A variety of treatment settings are available, from outpatient to residential, and early intervention is a key factor in reducing the long-term health, athletic, emotional and spiritual consequences of having an eating disorder.

As a treatment professional with the luxury of working at a residential treatment center for girls and women, and as well as the outpatient setting in private practice, I am afforded the exquisite opportunity to bear witness to good treatment outcomes--full, long-term remission-which are more likely with early and appropriate intervention. The food/body/weight obsession is merely a symptom of underlying conditions. Being able to facilitate a normalization of eating behaviors, to ensure medical stability, and then get to underlying issues of how to live and live fully as a woman is a process I am grateful to be part of on a daily basis.

Athletic girls and women in recovery from eating disorders learn to live life as one female athlete among many, begin to repair broken family relationships, embark on the journey of healing trauma, experience the development of close peer relationships, regain the ability to participate as a strong and healthy female athlete, and develop a loving and empowered relationship with themselves. One of the strengths of female athletes with eating disorders is their love for the sport. To be able to mobilize this love in the service of increasing motivation to recover from an eating disorder can be a critical factor in successful treatment of female athletes with eating disorders.

A message of hope for full recovery, and "sober" or "abstinent" participation in athletics is important to convey to female athletes acutely ill with anorexia, bulimia or other eating disorders. The role of ongoing care and a slow gentle pace of recovery are equally important. It is a blessing for me to be involved in recovery from such a devastating and deadly illness, especially with female athletes--a group of girls and women who are so talented and beautiful and strong just as they are, just as the women they were created to be.

Dr. Kimberly Dennis is the Medical Director of Timberline Knolls.
 
She will be speaking in Arizona on November 14th for the IAEDP AZ Chapter.

Continue reading "Eating Disorder Recovery in Female Athletes" »

July 09, 2008

Parents Warn of Teen Over-the-Counter Drug Abuse

A common over-the-counter drug is at the center of one family's warning. They're hoping their message will spare some lives.  Watch the Dallas Fox News video report.

July 08, 2008

Research Shows Those Who Are Fit Fight Drugs Better

Research by a Davidson College neuroscientist and students demonstrates that the benefits of regular exercise include a lowered tendency to become addicted to illegal drugs.

The online version of the journal Drug and Alcohol Dependence published this week the results of the study by Associate Professor Mark A. Smith that shows that exercise can help prevent drug addiction.

Smith said his research provides scientific validity for a long-standing suspicion among drug abuse researchers that exercise plays a role in helping people avoid and overcome drug addiction. "We've known that individuals who engage in exercise have lower rates of substance abuse," said Smith. "But there were previously no data that showed a cause and effect relationship."

Read the complete earticle here: http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/114170.php

June 10, 2008

Build Your Resilience: Optimal Performance and Self-Renewal

Dr. Stephen Sideroff, Clinical Director of Moonview Sanctuary and assistant professor at the UCLA School of Medicine, contributed an article to Leadership Excellence (www.leaderexcel.com) this past May that is both powerful to our personal lives and to the lives of those we help to transition into a lifestyle of recovery.

Heart of Resilience looks at a nine-component model of resilience, "which creates a comprehensive picture of personal functioning that leads to optimal performance with manageable stress"

...... At the heart of the matter is management of stress. While stress helps to motivate and enhance focus, it also results in sleeplessness, tension, and burn-out.  Although you may recognize stress, you may be powerless to manage it, whether because of its biological importance and facility in creating focus or its use in masking underlying emotional issues. People who lack self-acceptance are often the most driven to push themselves far beyond functionality.

Download the entire article here
Download heart_of_resilience.doc

Stephen Sideroff, Ph.D.
 
Clinical Director
 
Moonview Sanctuary
   
 
 
Assistant Professor
 
Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences
 
University of California, Los Angeles
   
 
 
Director
 
Raoul Wallenberg Institute of Ethics
 
Malibu, California
 

June 03, 2008

In Need of a Plan B to Deter Young Athletes From Drug Use

Published: October 18, 2007

As much as many of us abhor drug testing in principle, with drug use exploding around us we accept the premise — I did, at least — that drug testing at the high school level was a necessary deterrent to drug use.

But a study released today in the Journal of Adolescent Health challenges the deeply held, or at least hopeful, notion that high school drug testing is a deterrent.

Read the whole article by clicking here.

April 16, 2008

Drunkorexia...An Eating Disorder with a Twist

The latest entry in the lexicon of food-related ills is drunkorexia, shorthand for a disturbing blend of behaviors: self-imposed starvation or binging and purging, combined with alcohol abuse.

Drunkorexia is not an official medical term. But it hints at a troubling phenomenon in addiction and eating disorders. Among those who are described as drunkorexics are college-age binge drinkers, typically women, who starve all day to offset the calories in the alcohol they consume. The term is also associated with serious eating disorders, particularly bulimia, which often involve behavior like binging on food — and alcohol — and then purging.

Anorexics, because they severely restrict their calorie intake, tend to avoid alcohol. But some drink to calm down before eating or to ease the anxiety of having indulged in a meal. Others consume alcohol as their only sustenance. Still others use drugs like cocaine and methamphetamine to suppress their appetites.

"There are women who are afraid to put a grape in their mouth but have no problem drinking a beer," said Dr. Douglas Bunnell, the director of outpatient clinical services for the Renfrew Center, based in Philadelphia.

The center, like a small but growing number of eating-disorder and addiction-treatment facilities, most on the West Coast, offers a dual focus on substance abuse and eating disorders. ....... continue reading

April 04, 2008

Current Drug Information : 'Budder'

Budder is a concentrated form of THC, the main psychoactive chemical in cannabis (marijuana).
Contents

    * 1 Comparison with Other Cannabis-Related Drugs
    * 2 Method of Use
    * 3 Effects
    * 4 Method of Creation
    * 5 References
    * 6 See also

Comparison with Other Cannabis-Related Drugs

Budder is reported as being the purest cannabis product available, at anywhere between 82% and 99.6% THC/CBN/CBD[1], making it several times more potent than the buds of the cannabis plant that are usually consumed (5%–15%). One hit of Budder is supposedly equal to 1 – 2 full cannabis joints. Also the high is reported as being more clear and longer lasting than "average" marijuana.

Method of Use

Inhalation is the primary method of consumption, and is performed by first heating a piece of metal with a propane torch, or with a budder-kit which consists of a butane torch with a small strip of metal attached and designed to be heated when the lighter is lit. A minuscule amount (about the size of the head of a pin) of the budder is applied to the heated metal. This will result in gaseous THC and other cannabinoids being released, which can then be inhaled. You can also use charcoal (found at most middle eastern stores used for hookahs). You use a pin/dentist tool(found at hardware stores) to scoop the budder and drop onto the coal. You can use a plastic pop bottle with the bottom cut off as your hooters.

Effects

The effects of budder are reasonably fast-acting and long-lasting, and similar to the effects of smoking cannabis. Initially, the user may experience a sharp increase in body temperature and heart rate. The user will then enter a mellow and soft state of mind for several hours, whose effects can include but are not limited to:

    * auditory and / or visual hallucinations (however not anywhere near as strong as psilocybin/LSD)
    * random stream of consciousness-like thought patterns
    * disconnection / separation from outside events
    * paranoia
    * hunger

Major effects subside after 3 or 4 hours, depending on dosage and THC tolerance of the user. Some effects can still be felt after 8 hours, and in some cases users can feel "burned out" the next day.

Budder is extremely potent and sometimes has a delayed "kick-in" time before it reaches its full effect. The result of this is that users can overconsume and then be overwhelmed by the extreme effect of the drug.

Method of Creation

Budder is made by whipping in air and freezing isomerizied hash oil. Isomerization is an additional chemical step that converts the delta 9-thc to delta 6-thc activating a lot of the normally non-active cannabinoids[2].

References

   1. Beautiful Budder article at cannabisculture.org
   2. Article mentioning Budder at The Vancouver Sun

Thank You Joyce for sharing this new information with us!
    Joyce Sundin, CCDC II, NCAC II, BRI II, CPGC
Board Registered Intervention Specialist
Addiction Intervention Specialist
206-634-0434
888-634-0434
www.interventionhelp.com

March 10, 2008

New Generation Gap as Older Addicts Seek Help

In their separate oasis, alcoholics and prescription drug abusers of a certain age do not curse at one another, raise their voices in anger or blast music at midnight. They don’t brag about their macho pasts or stage drama-queen breakups on the communal pay phone. They show up on time for therapy groups.

“We have different health issues, different emotional issues, different grief issues,” said Patrick Gallagher, 66, who was treated here for a dual addiction to pain medication and alcohol. “We need more peace and quiet and a different pace.”

Across the country, substance abuse centers are reaching out to older addicts whose numbers are growing and who have historically been ignored. There are now residential and outpatient clinics dedicated to those over 50, special counselors just for them at clinics that serve all ages, and screenings at centers for older Americans and physicians’ offices to identify older people unaware of their risk.

Addiction specialists and organizations for the elderly anticipate a tidal wave of baby boomers needing help for addictions, often for different substances and with different attitudes toward treatment than the generation that came before them. Federal data shows ........... (continue reading)

Excerpted from the New York Times article on March 6, 2008.

January 22, 2008

Check Out MusiCares and see how they ROCK!

MusiCares offers a variety of Recovery Programs aimed at meeting the needs of recovery support in and through the diverse lifestyle of the musician.

MusiCares Connection : This recovery support network identifies music people in recovery who are willing to offer their support to others going through the recovery process.

Inspiring Stories & Experiences by supporting Musicians :  In recognition of September being National Recovery Month, MusiCares has launched new online resources to continue our commitment to educate the music community about substance abuse issues. Please take a moment to explore the new offerings. While MusiCares works in confidentiality with clients, the artists and managers who appear here feel so strongly about our programs and services that they wanted to speak publicly about our Foundation.

Check them out, and feel free to plug-in through volunteer and sponsorship opportunities.... Here's how you can help!

October 15, 2007

Drug and Alcohol Relapse Facts

  • Most people completing addiction treatment are fragilely balanced between sustained recovery and resumption of alcohol or other drugs in the year following discharge from treatment.
  • The window of greatest vulnerability for relapse after treatment is the first 30-90 days.
  • Between 25-35% of people who complete addiction treatment will be readmitted within five years.
  • Recovery is not fully stabilized(point at which future risk lifetime relapse drops below 15%) until four to five years of sustained recovery.
  • Sustained addiction can be lethal: relapses following addiction treatment produce high death rates from accidental poisoning/overdose, liver disease, cancer, cardiovascular disease, AIDS, suicide and homicide.

          Source:  William, HBO/Addiction

October 12, 2007

Relapse Triggers: Key to long term recovery

Addiction_triggers_brain_2 Research suggests that relapse is almost inevitable during the recovery process. However, there also appears to be certain triggers that can stimulate an addict to use again. Unfortunately, Addicts often can’t predict what is going to trigger their relapse.  They don’t often see the triggers that stimulate them to relapse and aren’t sure what the triggers were once relapse has occurred.  Recent studies indicate that identifying relapse triggers is helping addicts recover sooner and longer.

Here are some common triggers that if processed correctly can help addicts prevent relapse:

Exhaustion: Allowing yourself to become overly tired. Not following through on self-care behaviors of adequate rest, good nutrition, and regular exercise. Good physical health is a component of emotional health. How you feel will be reflected in your thinking and judgment.

Dishonesty: It begins with a pattern of small, unnecessary lies with those you interact with in family, social, and at work. This is soon followed by lying to yourself or rationalizing and making excuses for avoiding working your program.

Impatience: Things are not happening fast enough for you. Or, others are not doing what you want them to do or what you think they should do.

Argumentative: Arguing small insignificant points which indicate a need to always be right. This is sometimes seen as developing an excuse to drink.

Depression: Overwhelming and unaccountable despair may occur in cycle. If it does, talk about it and deal with it. You are responsible for taking care of yourself.

Frustration: With people and because things may not be going your way. Remind yourself intermittently that things are not always going to be the way that you want them.

Self-Pity: Feeling like a victim, refusing to acknowledge that you have choices and are responsible for your own life and the quality of it.

Cockiness: "Got it Made," compulsive behavior is no longer a problem. Start putting self in situations where there are temptations to prove to others that you don't have a problem.

Complacency: Not working your program with the commitment that you started with. Having a little fear is a good thing. More relapses occur when things are going well than when not.

Expecting Too Much From Others: "I've changed, why hasn't everyone else changed too?" You can only control yourself. It would be great if other people changed their self-destructive behaviors, but that is their problem. You have your own problems to monitor and deal with. You cannot expect others to change their lifestyle just because you have.

Letting Up On Discipline: Daily inventory, positive affirmations, 12-Step meetings, therapy, meditation, prayer. This can come from complacency and boredom. Because you cannot afford to be bored with your program, take responsibility-talk about it and problem solve it. The cost of relapse is too great. Sometimes you must accept that you have to do some things that are the routine for a clean and sober life.

The Use of Mood-Altering Chemicals: You may feel the need or desire to get away from things by drinking, popping a few pills, etc., and your physician may participate in the thinking that you will be responsible and not abuse the medication. This is the most subtle way to enter relapse. Take responsibility for your life and the choices that you make.

Sources: relapse-prevention.org factsaboutdrugs.com drugoverdose.com heroinaddiction2.com marijuanaaddiction.info interventionspecialists.com