Author: The Fix

  • Senate Passes Sweeping Opioid Legislation, Treatment Advocates Unimpressed

    Senate Passes Sweeping Opioid Legislation, Treatment Advocates Unimpressed

    “None of the bills include providing the one thing communities hit by the opioid crisis need most: funding,” says one treatment advocate.

    A bipartisan effort to stem the opioid crisis, while impressive in scope, does not have what it takes to stem the national opioid crisis, say treatment advocates.

    On Monday (Sept. 17), the Senate passed a package of 70 bills—racking up a cost of $8.4 billion—with a 99-to-1 vote to address various aspects of the opioid crisis. The lone dissenter was Senator Mike Lee of Utah.

    The goal was to tackle the opioid crisis from multiple angles—like expanding access to treatment and thwarting shipments of illicit drugs from abroad—but not everyone is impressed with the expansive legislation.

    Joy Burwell, president and CEO of the National Council for Behavioral Health, which represents American health care organizations that deliver mental health and substance use disorder services, expressed her organization’s disappointment that “Congress missed this opportunity to make a meaningful, long-term investment in our nation’s addiction treatment system.”

    One way to accomplish this, Burwell says, would be to include the the Excellence in Mental Health and Addiction Treatment Expansion Act, a bill that would expand a current program that has shown success in improving access to addiction treatment services.

    The package of bills passed in the Senate, however, falls short of their expectations. “None of the bills include providing the one thing communities hit by the opioid crisis need most: funding,” wrote Burwell in a statement. “Nor do they offer a comprehensive solution to the country’s addiction crisis.”

    The legislation package includes various measures intended to fight substance abuse. They include expanding access to opioid-addiction medication (like buprenorphine); funding recovery centers that provide temporary housing, job training, and other support during a transition to recovery; expanding the scope of mental health professionals where they are in short supply; expanding first responder naloxone programs; and preventing illicit drugs from being shipped via the US Postal Service.

    Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio admitted that the legislation does have missing pieces. “It doesn’t include everything all of us want to see but it has important new initiatives and it’s a step in the right direction,” he said, according to the Washington Post. “Congress is committing itself to actually putting politics aside. It’s not just bipartisan—I think it’s nonpartisan.”

    According to the Post, the House passed a similar measure in June. Now the two chambers will go over the differences before sending the package off to Trump.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Fortnite Addiction Is Ending Marriages In The UK

    Fortnite Addiction Is Ending Marriages In The UK

    The popular video game is becoming popularly cited in divorce petitions across the pond.

    The fact that video games can become addictive is not new. But the fact that they may play a role in divorce—especially one game in particular—is now coming to light.

    The video game Fortnite Battle Royale, according to UK-based website Divorce Online, has been mentioned in 200 divorce petitions filed on the website since January. This is about 5% of the total petitions the site has received in that timeframe.

    According to Quartz, Fornite Battle Royale is “a multiplayer Hunger Games–style shooter-survival contest where the goal is to kill off everyone else.”

    The game was released last year and is free to users. However, most users buy digital items within the game, spending an average of $85 for such items.

    According to Divorce Online, a spokesman stated that ”addiction to drugs, alcohol and gambling have often been cited as reasons for relationship breakdowns but the dawn of the digital revolution has introduced new addictions.”

    “These now include online pornography, online gaming and social media, so it is no surprise to us that more and more people are having relationship problems because of our digital addictions.”

    According to Fortune, it’s not just relationships that are suffering because of the video game. It’s become problematic in schools, especially since the release of the mobile app. In fact, some schools are even having wifi speed issues because of the number of students using the app. In some cases, it has even led to students fighting or disregarding school work. 

    The game has also been an issue for some professional sports teams. For example, Fortune notes, hockey players from the Ontario Hockey League have been asked to remove any references of the game from their social media accounts. Major League Baseball has also cited issues with the game, even reporting one case of carpal tunnel. 

    Even amid the issues it has caused, Fortune states, the game is growing in popularity. 

    “In July, the free-to-access game passed the billion-dollar threshold through in-game sales alone, and some colleges are even starting to offer scholarships to top players,” Fortune reports.

    According to Divorce Online, the numbers are indicative of the divorce market as a whole.

    “These numbers equate to roughly 5% of the 4,665 petitions we have handled since the beginning of the year and as one of the largest filers of divorce petitions in the UK, is a pretty good indicator,” a spokesman said.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Former Pantera Frontman Phil Anselmo: I'm Nine Months Clean

    Former Pantera Frontman Phil Anselmo: I'm Nine Months Clean

    “I haven’t had a drink in almost three years. Man, I’m feeling better and better.”

    Lead singer Phil Anselmo of Pantera has had heavy bouts with heroin, painkillers and alcohol addiction. Now, the vocalist says he’s nine months sober and 45 pounds lighter.

    Anselmo is currently fronting a new band, Philip H. Anselmo & The Illegals, and on a recent podcast he spoke about the back injury that lead him to painkiller abuse.

    “I ruptured a lower disc at about the age of 24, and just up to this past January, I’ve been at war with it,” Anselmo recalls. “So chronic pain meets every medication that you can get from a doctor or not, I’ve done ‘em all. So that has been a battle, man. And if you mix the chronic pain and the hydrocodone, which is another catalyst for another drug, which could be Xanax—it commonly goes hand in hand—that is a toxic brew in the brain, man. So it’s a war. And I’ve gotta say now—I am nine months clean and I haven’t had a drink in almost three years. Man, I’m feeling better and better.”

    Anselmo turned 50 this June. “My 50th was better than my 30th and 40th by light years, man. Just peace of mind and knowing I wasn’t gonna wake up the next day with a hangover—that’s a good feeling, man, every day.”

    Anselmo told Decibel that he hasn’t had a drink since Mardi Gras in 2016.

    “My body feels like I woke up in a car wreck every day of my life anyway, so to put a hangover on top of it?” he said to The Daily Times. “And the only thing that’s going to beat it is more booze? I’m defeated. All hail the hangover—the thing that knocked Phil Anselmo on his ass!”

    Anselmo also told Decibel that 2016 was the first year he ever performed sober, and he claimed he doesn’t miss alcohol. “I don’t crave it… Now will I have a sip at some point in the future? I honestly don’t know. It’s a day-by-day thing. But I feel much better as far as being onstage and having that clarity.”

    In speaking about his past drug addiction to Loudwire, Anselmo said to fans, “First and foremost, don’t use hard drugs. There’s ways around things. Go to a doctor, get checked out. Don’t just take your friend’s word for it: ‘Hey, this pill’s gonna fix everything. This drug’s gonna fix everything.’ It’s not true. It’s fake. Don’t use hard drugs. And I learned the hard way, but here I am.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Roseanne Barr Says Her Character On "Conners" Will Suffer Fatal Overdose

    Roseanne Barr Says Her Character On "Conners" Will Suffer Fatal Overdose

    Barr revealed the alleged fate of her namesake character in a recent interview.

    As the premiere of The Conners nears, fans of the show are that much closer to learning how Roseanne Conner gets written off the show.

    In May, Roseanne Barr was kicked off her own classic sitcom, Roseanne, over a racist tweet that ABC Entertainment President Channing Dungey called “abhorrent, repugnant and inconsistent with our values.”

    The show was revived in 2018 and enjoyed positive reviews, but was canceled in May because of the controversy.

    ABC decided to move on without Barr with its spin-off The Conners, which airs on October 16.

    John Goodman, who plays Roseanne’s husband Dan Conner, hinted at Roseanne’s death in a recent interview with The Times. “I guess [Dan will] be mopey and sad because his wife’s dead,” he said in August.

    While we won’t know Roseanne’s fate until the show airs, Barr said in a new interview that her character dies of a drug overdose. “Oh ya, they killed her. They have her die of an opioid overdose,” she said on the YouTube show Walk Away.

    She’s not happy about it. “It wasn’t enough to [fire me], they had to so cruelly insult the people who loved that family and that show,” she said.

    But the comedian, who was also dropped by her talent agency at the peak of the controversy, is ready to move on from the drama. “There’s nothing I can do about it. It’s done. It’s over. There’s no fight left.”

    According to People, The Conners officially started production in August. The spin-off will follow “the Conner family who, after a sudden turn of events, are forced to face the daily struggles of life in Lanford in a way they never have before.”

    While it’s a rather shocking way to write off the beloved titular character, a drug overdose is plausible for Roseanne after what we saw in the last season. 

    We learn in season 10 that Roseanne is dependent on pain medication. Desperate to put off a costly surgical procedure, she keeps secret stashes around the house to keep her pain at bay. “I got these pills because I’m going to be dealing with this for a long time,” she tells Dan in the episode “Netflix & Pill.”

    “I’m in pain so I take a few extra pills. It’s not like I’m a drug addict.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • You Got Sober, but Are You Having Fun?

    You Got Sober, but Are You Having Fun?

    I love my job; I adore writing. But that doesn’t necessarily mean I’m having fun. If anything, it shows me how much of my life is work.

    I arrived at my therapist’s office earlier this year in a state of complete burnout. My adrenals weren’t producing sufficient cortisol to get me through the day, inflammation was rampant throughout my body, and my immune system had given up. As a writer who specializes in recovery and wellness, I couldn’t understand how this had happened to me. I worked out four days a week and ate well. I had also uprooted my life and moved to America, where I’d been working seven days a week for a year. My body had kept score. It was telling me it was time to rest, work through some stuff, and recalibrate. In many ways, this process mirrored the process of recovery.

    Six months ago, my therapist asked me if I knew how to have fun. Perplexed, I looked at her and wondered why she asked what appeared to be such a daft question. Of course I do, I rather flippantly replied. She asked me to expand upon my answer. I began to explain all the ways I have fun in my life, while simultaneously experiencing one of those moments where I recognized that the words coming out of my mouth were somehow communicating a distorted perception of reality.

    I love my job; I adore writing. I beamed. I also love interacting with others: digging into the heart of what makes people tick and how things work, challenging perspectives, and feeling like I’m contributing to the recovery community. I really enjoy yin yoga and exercising too, I tagged on to the end of my explanation, as if to somehow bolster my argument that of course I know how to have fun.

    I realized that few of these examples equate to fun. Instead, they provide a sense of fulfillment from my writing and my interactions with others. I may enjoy my job, but that doesn’t necessarily mean I’m having fun. If anything, it shows me how much of my life is work.

    Writing is such a complex process that elicits a range of feelings and emotions, from great joy to intense, cathartic pain. While writing has remained an enjoyable activity (most of the time), I have made it my career. Forcing a creative process to adhere to deadlines and other people’s requirements takes away a large chunk of joy and places it firmly in the realm of work, not play. And I used yoga and exercise more as activities of self-care that gave me a sense of relief rather than joy.

    I left therapy that day pondering the concept of fun, my understanding of it, what it looked like to me, and what real examples I could muster up. To be completely honest, it was really challenging. First, I had to consider what fun means to me.

    When I think of fun, I think of laughter, joy, pleasure and excitement. Breaking that down, I also realized that excitement is something I have also mistaken for fun. I felt excitement when I used drugs, because my life was so unfulfilling and lacking any sense of joy. Given my history, I realized I associated excitement with the danger of taking drugs.

    According to Merriam-Webster, fun is defined as:

    1 : what provides amusement or enjoyment; specifically : playful often boisterous action or speech full of fun
    2 : a mood for finding or making amusement. all in fun
    3 a : Amusement, enjoyment. Sickness takes all the fun out of life play games for fun
    b : derisive jest : sport, ridicule. a figure of fun. They made fun of the way he talked.
    4 : violent or excited activity or argument. Insults were exchanged and then the fun began.

    So really, I was looking for what kinds of play, or activities, gave me a sense of enjoyment in life. Academically, I understood the concept. Relationally, I still struggled to find examples.

    I could see from my earlier discussion with my therapist that interaction gives me a sense of joy — especially meaningful discussion. Dinner at a fancy restaurant where the food has unusual flavor combinations and the conversation is interesting and intense elicits a feeling of great joy. I feel inspired by eating out and often recreate, with my own twist, dishes I’ve enjoyed — that is pleasurable, especially if I’m listening to music. I also love playful activities, such as crafting and attending creative workshops, and learning how to make something, like a plant hanging or a macramé project. And I get great joy from riding my bike in Portland. Being outdoors in Portland and seeing its natural beauty has been incredibly pleasurable. I love exploring the Pacific Northwest.

    Confident in my new understanding that the construct of fun means enjoyment, pleasure, and play, I was keen to understand how others understand fun and how they engage with it. As I often do when considering a topic, I took my question to the recovery community and asked what my peers do for fun. It surprised me that many people were unable to answer, and some answered in the same way that I had with my therapist. Others listed dancing, music and concerts, creative activities, traveling, reading, playing with children in their family, and gaming, but there certainly weren’t a lot of responses. Some even asked what I meant by the word fun.

    When asked why we struggle to have fun, significantly more people commented. Recovery scientist Austin Brown said: “People with SUD [substance use disorder] are obsessed with themselves and how they ‘feel.’ I think this carries over into recovery. I think we struggle with obsessions with our own emotions for years into recovery. So it is natural that the question ‘How will I have fun (i.e., find instantaneous relief from negativity) in recovery?’ is brought up. It is an offshoot of this obsession with our feelings.”

    Lisa McLaughlin, a person in long-term recovery, says: “As the original party people, many of us in recovery struggle to have fun in the company of drinkers wearing our new killjoy hat. It adds insult to injury that most of us still burn our candles at both ends and have passionate dreams and interests, but find ourselves suddenly shy and isolated in the same rooms where we used to hold court and entertain. It helps to find new sober souls to convene and get rowdy with.”

    Arielle Ashford, who is also in long-term recovery, told me: “I think we take recovery far too seriously and therefore ourselves way too seriously. Having fun in the past equaled trouble.” Relearning how to have fun is a challenging task. “It takes imagination, creativity, and courage to get out and have a good time without alcohol and other drugs,” Arielle said.

    Recovery is such a huge learning process. Many of us didn’t know how to live before we entered recovery, much less how to have fun — or what that even means. Austin explained that we “have little training in the art of life. It takes a concerted effort to learn. Also, I think they have always mistaken excitement for happiness or joy. In recovery, we have to learn what those things mean and how they feel.”

    I believe that we need to engage in as much joy, pleasure, and play as we can to bring levity to what can sometimes be a challenging life in recovery. How do you have fun in your recovery?

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Controversial Lawmaker Wants Congress Members Tested for Drugs

    Controversial Lawmaker Wants Congress Members Tested for Drugs

    The bill was dismissed by the state’s Democratic Party, whose executive director dismissed Higgins’ proposition as “gimmicks and bravado.” 

    A Louisiana representative has introduced a resolution that would lawmakers in Congress to submit to drug screenings once every term. 

    U.S. Rep. Clay Higgins (R-LA), who is also a Reserve Deputy Marshal and former St. Landry’s Parish public information officer who has drawn criticism for combative social media posts, said that House Concurrent Resolution 135 is intended to hold elected officials to the same standards as their constituents, who have to submit to drug testing for their jobs.

    The bill, which currently has no co-sponsors, was dismissed by the state’s Democratic Party, whose executive director dismissed Higgins’ proposition as “gimmicks and bravado.”

    Higgins’ resolution would require lawmakers to not only subject to the random testing, but also reimburse taxpayers for costs.

    Those who test positive would be reported to the House or Senate Committee on Ethics, which would also publicize the names of any Congress members that did not submit to the tests.

    In an interview with USA Today, Higgins initially joked that his resolution was based on his observation of “behavior that would cause one to wonder” about his colleagues in the U.S. House and Senate. But in a statement issued on September 13—the same day he introduced the resolution—Higgins took a more serious tone about his intentions. 

    “Elected officials in Washington, D.C. should be subject to the same kind of random drug screenings that blue-collar, working-class Americans have to endure,” he wrote. “Congress shouldn’t live by a different set of rules. This effort is about maintaining accountability and ensuring sober service to We, the People.” 

    Higgins previously proposed a similar resolution in a June 2018 Facebook video, in which he stated, “Based on some of the behavior I’ve seen, I’d be very interested to know what kind of illegal drugs are flowing through the veins of our elected officials in Washington, D.C.”

    CBS affiliate KLFY-TV noted that Higgins had not specified whether he had actually seen any elected officials using or under the influence of drugs.

    Louisiana Democratic Party executive director Stephen Handwerk responded to Higgins’ resolution on Twitter. “When you haven’t delivered at all for your district I guess all you have is gimmicks and bravado,” wrote Handwerk, who also promoted Higgins’ opponent for the 3rd District seat, Mimi Methvin.

    Higgins initially made a name for himself on both the state and national front while with the St. Landry Parish Sheriff’s Office, where his weekly “Crime Stoppers” segments earned a following for his draconian approach to suspected criminals. A 2016 video in which he referred to predominately black gang members as “heathens” and “animals” earned a reprimand from Parish Sheriff Bobby Guidroz, after which Higgins resigned from the parish. 

    In 2017, Higgins posted a video in which he stated that “radicalized Islamic suspect[s]” should be “[hunted] down and [killed].” That same year, he posted a video taken at the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial site, where he stated that such concentration camps are the reason why the United States needs stronger homeland security and military measures.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Doctors Will Be Required To Check Prescription Database In California

    Doctors Will Be Required To Check Prescription Database In California

    The state’s monitoring system has been historically underused by healthcare providers. 

    Beginning on October 2, doctors in California will be required to check the state’s prescription monitoring database before writing a new prescription, in an attempt to provide better care and correct years of underutilization of the system.

    “California created the first system to track prescriptions of the strongest painkillers, but our state fell behind as the opioid crisis grew,” state Sen. Ricardo Lara, who drafted the legislation in 2015, told the Los Angeles Times. “I wrote SB 482 to require that doctors and others consult the CURES system before prescribing these powerful and addictive drugs. This tool will help limit doctor shopping, break the cycle of addiction and prevent prescriptions from ever again fueling an epidemic that claims thousands of lives.”

    California’s monitoring system, called The Controlled Substance Utilization Review and Evaluation System, or CURES, provides a list of patients’ prescriptions, the doctors who prescribed the medication and the pharmacies that filled them. The system was overhauled in 2016 to make it easier for doctors to use, and the new legislation will now require them to do so.

    Under the law, healthcare providers will need to check CURES every time they write a new prescription, or every four months for patients who have an ongoing prescription. There are exceptions, including for emergency room care and hospice patients.

    The legislation is meant to cut back on so-called doctor shopping, as well as ensure that doctors and patients are aware of any risky combinations of medicines that a patient is taking.

    “I think people make the mistake of thinking it’s just for doctor shopping,” said Dr. Roneet Lev, chief of emergency medicine at Scripps Mercy Hospital in San Diego. “Using CURES just makes you a smarter, better doctor.”

    Although some doctors balk at the amount of time that it will take to consult CURES, other believe that using the system will soon become second nature.

    “I think it’s going to be one of those things that a year from now is going to be second [nature] to them,” said Kimberly Kirchmeyer, executive director of the Medical Board of California. “It’s just the first round of it gets hard for them. Any additional administrative task for physicians in the world they live in is difficult for them, and we completely understand that.”

    However, if the requirement helps to protect patients, doctors say that they are willing to spend time using the CURES system.

    “I think every doctor in California will gladly do it as long as there’s a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow,” said Dr. Jason Toranto, chief of plastic surgery at Senta Clinic in San Diego. “As long as the patient is going to do better, that’s what it’s all about.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • "Dopesick Nation" Chronicles Struggle To Find Addiction Treatment

    "Dopesick Nation" Chronicles Struggle To Find Addiction Treatment

    “TV is typically the domain of heroes and monsters and we don’t believe in either.”

    A new docu-series shows the day-to-day struggle of finding help for people with substance use disorder.

    The first episode of Dopesick Nation, a new 10-part series that premiered on VICELAND last Wednesday (Sept. 12), follows Frankie and Allie as they seek treatment for Nate and Kelly, two drug users in South Florida.

    Frankie and Allie, who are in recovery themselves, explain the root of South Florida’s current heroin and fentanyl crisis—going back to the feds’ crackdown on prescription pills and the subsequent rise of heroin and fentanyl. 

    South Florida’s recovery industry is among the most notorious—people flock there to get help because it is “brimming with treatment centers on every corner,” Allie explains. Many are “predatory” in nature.

    “I have family in South Florida and they started to tell me about this billion dollar rehab industry. It seemed like everyone down there had a finger in that pie. It was a big, dark, open secret,” producer Ian Manheimer told The Fix via email. “In my research, I met a lot of people who were making a piles of fast money in this industry. Their incentives weren’t necessarily aligned with those of their clients and it led to a lot of horrible things happening.”

    The documentary follows Frankie as he tries to get Nate into treatment. He secured a scholarship for Nate, but they must wait for a bed to open up before he can be admitted. Until then, all Nate can do is wait and do his best to survive, one day at a time. “I don’t know if I can make it through another night,” he says as he is forced to wait longer than expected. “I fucking hate everything about what I’m doing.”

    Viewers can feel the frustration of this waiting game. It’s clear that Nate is sick and tired of feeling sick and tired. He’s ready for change, and to be present for his son.

    Frankie asks him, “Are you tired, and just done man?” Nate says, “It’s more of a mental/emotional thing, not as much of a physical thing like my body’s tired or my arms hurt, or I don’t have any veins left—you know, all those different reasons why people would stop getting high. Just emotionally and mentally drained as fuck, you’re like just done. It’s never been this bad before for some reason. I just want to have my family back.”

    Nate’s experience is like any other individual who is ready to quit, but can’t stop. After using for so long, Nate is physically addicted to heroin. If he can’t get professional help, the only thing that will make him feel better is heroin or Suboxone, a medication for opioid addiction.

    “This is a God-given opportunity. I’m not supposed to have this. And for whatever reason, I got it,” Nate said about the scholarship that Frankie got for him. “I need to take advantage of it because I can’t keep doing this anymore. This can’t define who I am. This isn’t me. Because I have more potential than that,” he says before he hits his pipe.

    At the end of the first episode, Nate is finally admitted to a treatment center, and is out in 30 days. He looks different—healthier and happier.

    Kelly, on the other hand, is harder for Allie to keep track of. She’s enthusiastic about recovery one day, but is no where to be found the next. But Allie, who met Kelly on her path to recovery, isn’t about to let go of her friend. “I’ll never give up on Kelly. Unless Kelly gives up on Kelly,” she says.

    As the series continues, we’ll meet more young men and women at the height of their crisis, Manheimer says. “Maybe they’re prostituting. Maybe they’re stealing. They’re homeless. Allie and Frank will have to convince them, against all odds, to get into detox before someone else takes the scholarship they have lined up.” 

    Dopesick Nation is about showing the raw reality of people’s experiences, without labels or judgment. “We wanted to make something real,” says Manheimer. “TV is typically the domain of heroes and monsters and we don’t believe in either.”

    Watch the first episode of Dopesick Nation here.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Drew Barrymore Talks Past Drug Use: Cocaine Is My Worst Nightmare

    Drew Barrymore Talks Past Drug Use: Cocaine Is My Worst Nightmare

    The “Santa Clarita Diet” actress got candid about her past drug use on Norm Macdonald’s new Netflix talk show.

    Drew Barrymore’s past struggles with substance misuse are well-known. After she became a superstar with the success of E.T., she followed the path of many child stars, battling addiction which threatened to end her career.

    Now in a recent appearance on Norm Macdonald’s new talk show Norm Macdonald has a Show, Barrymore says she has no desire to go back to those days.

    When Macdonald asked Barrymore if she missed cocaine, she emphatically replied, “Oh, God. It’s been a very long time, but no. Nothing would make me have a panic attack and seem like a bigger nightmare.”

    Looking back in hindsight, Barrymore said her early fame was “like a recipe for disaster. You know what’s exciting? I got my s— over with at, like 14. Like, midlife crisis, institutionalized, blacklisted, no family. Got it done. And then [I] got into the cycle of being my own parent. It’s sad that there’s this weird alchemy about kids doing this line of work that f— all of them up, and I’m no different.”

    Barrymore admitted she still drinks, telling Macdonald, “I enjoy my life and get out of my own head. It’s not that I’m this militant person of clarity and presence but [cocaine] is like my worst nightmare right now.”

    Substance abuse ran in Barrymore’s family. Her father battled alcoholism and eventually wound up homeless. Her grandfather was Hollywood legend—and legendary drinker—John Barrymore. Drew had already taken a trip to rehab by the age of 12, survived a suicide attempt, and was then institutionalized for 18 months.

    She described her lowest point to The Guardian. “Just knowing that I really was alone… My mom locked me up in an institution. But it did give an amazing discipline. It was like serious recruitment training and boot camp, and it was horrible and dark and very long-lived, a year and a half, but I needed it.”

    Barrymore told Howard Stern in a past interview, “It was a very severe, locked down, no-Hollywood-rehab-30-day-Malibu-beachside-bullshit [place]… They saved my life.”

    After getting back into civilization, Barrymore lived with David Crosby, who was also in recovery, for two months, then worked a number of jobs before she rebuilt her acting career. She’s currently starring in the Netflix series Santa Clarita Diet.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Stephen Colbert Takes Aim At Big Pharma Over Opioid Crisis

    Stephen Colbert Takes Aim At Big Pharma Over Opioid Crisis

    “You know you’ve been bad when the government fines you one aircraft carrier.”

    Stephen Colbert publicly called out those responsible for the opioid crisis, as the Late Show host laid into Big Pharma during a segment last Friday (Sept. 14).

    “There are certain subjects that are genuinely hard to talk about like, the opioid crisis. It’s an epidemic that affects both political parties, Republican, Democrat, rich people, poor people, it does not discriminate,” Colbert said in the segment. “And a lot of people blame Big Pharma, but only because it’s their fault.”

    Colbert went on to single out Purdue Pharma, which manufactures OxyContin and is owned by members of the billionaire Sackler family. Colbert discussed the various lawsuits against the company accused of downplaying how addictive the medication could be “even as their sales reps used the words ‘street value,’ ‘crush’ and ‘snort’ in the late nineties.”

    “That’s what happens when the head of sales is El Chapo,” Colbert joked in the segment, referring to the former head of the Sinaloa drug cartel, who is now in U.S. custody.

    In 2007, Purdue was fined more than $600 million after pleading guilty to misrepresenting OxyContin’s potential for abuse.

    “You know you’ve been bad when the government fines you one aircraft carrier,” Colbert stated. “Of course, this same time they made $35 billion.”

    He went on to add that the Sackler family wants to expand globally and that they already own a lesser-known company called Rhodes Pharma.

    Colbert stated, “It was revealed just this week that they own a second, secret company, Rhodes Pharma, a little-known Rhode Island-based drug maker that is among the largest producers of off-patent generic opioids in the U.S.”

    Colbert went on to discuss the fact that Rhodes Pharma recently was granted a patent for a new medication—a “fast-acting form of buprenorphine”—that could potentially treat opioid use disorder. The new medication would be in wafer form rather than a tablet, meaning it would dissolve quickly and work faster. 

    “Another not-so-fun fact about Rhodes Pharmaceuticals is, in addition to selling all these off-brand opiates, they also just patented a new drug to help wean addicts off opioids,” Colbert said.

    “So, the Sacklers addicted the country to opioids, now they’re going to profit off the cure?” Colbert noted. “That takes a pair of swingin’ Sacklers.”

    View the original article at thefix.com