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Archive for July, 2010

07-25-2010 Alcohol and Drug The Treatment Center’s Blog of the Day

Sunday, July 25th, 2010

The closing of a residential drug treatment center in Indiana due to a $400,000 deficit has caused concern among county officials who rely on the program as an alternative to jail. Hamilton Center Inc. has announced the closing of its seven-bed residential drug treatment center in Terre Haute, Indiana. The drug treatment center will close on July 23. It has provided recovery services for men in the community since 2005. Many of those in the program were assigned through a Vigo County court.

The implications of the drug treatment center’s closure have been felt throughout the local justice system. Judge Michael Lewis of Vigo County Superior Court said that the 28-day program has been an essential tool for the courts to use in getting treatment help for defendants.

“Keeping them involved in some type of rehab keeps them off of drugs,” Lewis said. “I’m not sure about the success rate, but I know if it helps even a few to turn their lives around, then it’s worth it. If we can save even one life, it’s a good thing.”

Most of the inmates in the Vigo County jail are struggling with some kind of drug or alcohol addiction. Often, those inmates are not released from the jail until they have had some time to detox. This makes them more suitable to successfully complete a program at a drug treatment center.

“Any incentive we can give these people to stay away from drugs, stay away from alcohol, we utilize. And that’s another one that’s gone now,” Lewis said. Another drug treatment center in the area, Fellowship House, closed its doors in April, a victim of the poor economy. The closure of the Hamilton Center leaves Freebirds Solutions Center, Club Soda and Club Gobi as the only drug treatment centers available in Vigo County.

A local defense attorney said the loss of the Hamilton Center will add to the county’s jail overcrowding and budget problems.

“The most expensive thing to do for someone is to incarcerate them,” said Christopher Shema. “If you can put someone in a residential treatment program or a halfway house where they can get the help they need, at a much lower cost than incarceration, everyone wins.”

Shema said many of his clients are assigned by the court because they are indigent and benefit from treatment programs. He believes that if they do not have access to treatment besides jail, they are more likely to commit other crimes in the future.

“It’s like having a toolbox with only a hammer, a sometimes a screwdriver or pliers is the more efficient tool,” Shema said.

The county sheriff knows that the closing of the Hamilton Center program is a problem for the community.

“Even though it’s only seven beds,” Sheriff Jon Marvel said, “those seven beds are freed up every 28 days, so seven a month are basically getting out of jail into treatment.”

Transferring nonviolent offenders into drug treatment programs is more cost efficient. It also means a person is less likely to commit future crimes because of an addiction to drugs. The Vigo County jail is constantly overcrowded and is currently over its limit of 268 set by an agreement with the Indiana Civil Liberties Union following a lawsuit ten years ago.

07-23-2010 Alcohol and Drug The Treatment Center’s Blog of the Day

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

New research finds that older women who binge drink during pregnancy are at a higher risk for giving birth to babies with permanent alcohol-related brain damage. Children of pregnant women age 30 or older are more likely to suffer from Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders, a group of birth defects that includes irreversible physical and mental problems and mental retardation.

“Our finding that children born to older drinking mothers have more alcohol-related attention deficits than children born to younger drinking women is consistent with prior studies,” said Lisa M. Chiodo, an assistant professor in the college of nursing at Wayne State University in Michigan.

“Although not conclusive, this finding may be due to older moms drinking for longer periods, greater alcohol tolerance, and having more alcohol-related health problems – all leading to higher levels of alcohol in their fetuses,” said Chiodo. “It has also been suggested that changes in body size, metabolism or composition, or number of births, which are all related to maternal age, may be factors increasing the impact of prenatal alcohol exposure.”

The study involved 462 children – an equal amount of boys and girls – who were born to inner-city women. The researchers looked at binge drinking, smoking, cocaine, marijuana and opiate use during pregnancy.

The researchers discovered babies born to mothers who were binge drinking while pregnant had more attention deficit issues than those babies born to younger mothers.

The National Women’s Health Information Center cautions that there is no safe amount of alcohol use during pregnancy.

7-23-2010 Alcohol and Drug Treatment Center’s Blog of the Day

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

There is a new kind of child abuse. Each year, some children are forced to take antidepressants, cold medicines, painkillers, sedatives, alcohol, marijuana or cocaine, according to a new study. The study is published in the current issue of the Journal of Pediatrics.

“We believe that the malicious use of pharmaceuticals may be an under-recognized form and or component of child maltreatment,” said Dr. Shan Yin, who conducted the study at the Rocky Mountain Poison and Drug Center in Denver.

Yin is a medical toxicologist. He analyzed more than 21.4 million calls to the National Poison Data System between 2000 and 2008. In investigating cases of drug and alcohol poisoning that had been coded as “malicious” in children under 7, Yin found 1,439 cases. Of that number, 172 children were seriously injured and 18 died as a result of those actions.

“I just don’t know what goes on in the minds of people who try to harm their child,” said Yin.

7-13-10 Alcohol and Drug Treatment centers Blog of the Day

Saturday, July 17th, 2010

A new compound similar to the active component of marijuana may provide effective pain relief without all the negative side effects. A new study published in the journal of the International Anesthesia Research Society discovered that MDA19, a synthetic cannabinoid, seems to avoid side effects by acting on one specific subtype of the cannabinoid receptor.

“MDA19 has the potential for alleviating neuropathic pain without producing adverse effects in the central nervous system,” said study author Dr. Mohamed Naguib of The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center.

The study involved analyzing the pharmacology and effects of MDA19. The research led by Dr. Naguib was designed to see if the cannabinoid receptors can be a target for new drugs to treat neuropathic pain. Neuropathic pain is difficult to treat and common in patients with diabetes.

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7-16-10 Alcohol and Drug Treatment centers Blog of the Day

Saturday, July 17th, 2010

According to a new report, patients with addiction or mental health problems accounted for 12.5 percent of all visits to the emergency room in 2007. The report from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality found that 12 million ER visits each year were prompted by addictions or mental illness. Of that number, 66 percent involved mental health problems, 25 percent involved alcohol or other drug abuse, and 9 percent involved both. Forty one percent of these patients were then hospitalized, more than 2.5 times the rate for other patients.

The most common causes of addiction and mental health admissions to emergency departments were mood disorders, anxiety disorders, alcohol and drug disorders, schizophrenia and intentional self-harm.

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7-14-10 Alcohol and Drug Treatment centers Blog of the Day

Saturday, July 17th, 2010

A mother in San Antonio, Texas whose baby was found dead under her arm had been previously investigated three times on suspicion of drug abuse. Caseworkers from Child Protective Services were unable to previously determine any cause for further investigation.

The mother, who has not yet been charged with a crime, is under investigation in the death of her newborn daughter Dannilyn Lopez. The child was less than three weeks old. Police found drugs in the mother’s bedroom when the dead baby was discovered by construction workers. The mother was in an unfit state at the time. The medical examiner has not yet determined the cause of death.

A Child Protective Services spokeswoman said that all three anonymous complaints about the woman had been made since December of 2008. The complaints were dismissed after drug tests were negative. Both the mother and baby were tested when the baby was born on June 21, but those tests were then negative.

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7-12-10 Alcohol and Drug Treatment centers Blog of the Day

Saturday, July 17th, 2010

A researcher at the Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center has been awarded a 44 million grant for a five year study on how marijuana can affect HIV patients.

Dr. Patricia Molina will lead a team studying how cannabinoids, the principal psychoactive component of marijuana, produces slight changes in gene activity. These changes can affect how a patient responds to HIV. The grant was awarded to Molina and her team by the National Institute on Drug Abuse, which is a part of the National Institutes of Health.

Molina believes the research could result in new treatment therapies for people living with HIV.

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7-1-10 Alcohol and Drug Treatment centers Blog of the Day

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

Laws control the lesser man. Right conduct controls the greater one. ~Chinese Proverb

A federal jury has found a doctor in Kansas and his wife guilty of conspiring to profit from illegally prescribing painkillers to dozens of patients who later died.

Dr. Stephen Schneider and his wife, Linda, were convicted on June 23 of a moneymaking conspiracy prosecutors say was connected to 68 overdose deaths. The Schneiders are directly charged in 21 of those deaths. Prosecutors say the Schneiders carelessly wrote prescriptions for potent, addictive painkillers to people with severe pain but also to drug abusers who faked their symptoms.

Schneider testified he only tried to help people in chronic pain, but said he was duped by some painkiller addicts.

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