Category: Addiction News

  • China Agrees To Increase Fight Against Fentanyl

    China Agrees To Increase Fight Against Fentanyl

    China was labeled the “primary source” of fentanyl in the United States in a 2016 intelligence report by the Drug Enforcement Agency.

    Chinese President Xi Jinping has pledged to crack down on trafficking and manufacturing of the deadly synthetic opioid fentanyl as part of larger negotiations between the United States and the Asian superpower.

    Speaking after a dinner meeting on December 1, 2018 between Xi and President Donald Trump at the Group of 20 meeting in Buenos Aires, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said in a statement that China will enforce stricter rules in regard to the drug and work more closely with US law enforcement.

    Trump praised Xi’s decision to reporters aboard Air Force One, calling it a “game changer” for the American people. 

    China was labeled the “primary source” of fentanyl in the United States in a 2016 intelligence report by the Drug Enforcement Agency, which further claimed that production of the drug – which was the cause of death in nearly half of the more than 70,000 overdose mortalities in 2017, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention – and its analogues faced lax regulation in China, allowing for widespread production and sale through the internet.

    The Chinese government has attempted to correct the situation through arrests of drug traffickers and seizure of analogues, but its top drug official, Yu Haibin, told reporters in 2017 that there was “little evidence” that the country was producing the chemicals used to create fentanyl.

    Congressional investigations in 2018 found that Chinese opioid manufacturers were easily exploiting loopholes in the US Postal Service to ship large quantities of fentanyl and other drugs to the US, which prompted lawmakers from both political parties to press Trump on making fentanyl part of the upcoming meeting with China to avert a looming trade war between the two countries

    At the December 1 dinner, Trump told reporters in the room that he would address these concerns as part of his conversation with President Xi. As Bloomberg News noted, Wang, the Chinese Foreign Minister, later said the country will not only “tighten supervision of fentanyl and revise rules on the drug” but also work more closely with US law enforcement. Wang also said that the country would impose stiffer penalties on fentanyl traffickers.

    “What he will be doing to fentanyl could be a game changer for the United States and what fentanyl is doing to our country in terms of killing people,” said Trump at the press conference aboard Air Force One. “If [traffickers] get caught, they have the highest level of punishment.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • How to Recognize and Treat Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD)

    How to Recognize and Treat Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD)

    Seasonal Affective Disorder is much more than just the winter blues.

    Frank*, 55, has been living with bipolar disorder since he was 18. Over the decades he’s noticed that his condition is the most difficult to manage when fall gives way to winter.

    “As soon as it starts getting dark I feel it coming,” he said of his depressive symptoms.

    Erin, 57, is normally very active and productive, but as soon as the days become shorter she feels her mood slipping.

    “The first few days are great. You sit on the couch and read a book,” she said. “But then you end up sitting on the couch not doing anything but getting mad at yourself.”

    Frank and Erin both say they suffer from seasonal affective disorder (SAD), a type of depression that is linked to the change of seasons. Most often, seasonal affective disorder symptoms — which include typical depression symptoms like hopelessness, lack of energy or weight gain — strike during the winter months when short days and cold weather can leave even the healthiest people feeling a bit down.

    “As it becomes darker in the fall and winter and the weather starts becoming colder, it is common for individuals to have trouble with motivation, lack of energy and joy,” said Beth A. Burns, a therapist and clinical director at Fortitude Counseling & Wellness Services, Inc. in Lexington, North Carolina. “When we begin to consider SAD is when the individual is experiencing increasing distress throughout their day. It begins to impact their daily functioning, influencing their ability to maintain relationships, seek out social support, and have normal interpersonal and intrapersonal functioning.”

    Up to 6 percent of Americans experience depression during the winter, with as many as 20 percent experiencing a more mild form of SAD, according to The American Academy of Family Physicians. Luckily, the treatment for seasonal affective disorder is minimally invasive and can be very helpful for restoring optimal mental health during the winter months.

    How is SAD diagnosed?

    Although many people joke that they feel like hibernating during the winter, people who actually have seasonal affective disorder experience depressive symptoms that are severe enough to interfere with day-to-day life, just like the symptoms experienced by people with major depression.

    “Diagnosis of SAD lies on the spectrum of depression,” said Dr. Neeraj Gandotra, a psychiatrist who is on the faculty at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and is the chief medical officer at Delphi Behavioral Health Group. “It’s a form of depression.”

    Although all depression is cyclical, with periods where symptoms become better and worse, people with SAD find that their symptoms predictably flare up during the fall or winter and they experience remission during the spring and summer (although a rarer form of SAD can follow an opposite pattern, with flare-ups during the warmer months). In order to be diagnosed with SAD, a person must have this pattern for two years in a row.

    As with depression, SAD is diagnosed more often in men than women. And it is more common in areas that have darker, colder winters.

    “The incidence of this condition absolutely goes up further from the equator,” Gandotra said.

    What causes SAD?

    Doctors don’t fully understand why SAD occurs, but they are learning more about seasonal affective disorder symptoms and factors that can contribute to seasonal depression.

    “Like many mental illnesses, science has been unable to pinpoint a specific cause for Seasonal Affective Disorder,” said Dara Gasior, a psychologist and director of assessment and training at High Focus Centers, an addiction and mental health recovery center with locations throughout New Jersey. “However, research has been able to determine some of the biological clues which can help us to get a better understanding of why some people are more likely to get SAD, as well as ways to assist those suffering from it with getting some relief.”

    SAD is associated with three brain changes. People with the condition usually have lower levels of serotonin, the neurotransmitter that helps regulate mood, energy, sleep and digestion. Because these individuals have less serotonin, their brains are less effective at managing their mood, energy and sleep patterns. In addition, many people with SAD over-produce melatonin, a chemical that encourages sleep. This can make them feel more fatigued and disrupt their circadian rhythms. Finally, many people with seasonal affective disorder are deficient in vitamin D, which effects mood and energy and helps facilitate melatonin production. Because this vitamin is absorbed from sunlight, the short winter days can compound deficiency. Doctors also believe there is a genetic component to SAD.

    SAD and Substance Use Disorder

    Many people with SAD also struggle with substance issues, especially unhealthy drinking patterns. Gandotra said that the science in this area is speculative, but suggests that people who are depressed have higher levels of cortisol, the stress hormone.

    “That is a significant trigger for co-occurring substance use disorder,” he said. People may try to self-medicate with alcohol when they are stressed. In addition, SAD symptoms often peak during a time of year that is already stressful.

    “Seasonal affective disorder often impacts people during the holiday season in the U.S., a time which is often filled with increased family expectations, financial stressors and a corresponding increase in depression and substance abuse,” Gasior said.

    As with any co-occurring mental health condition and substance misuse, it’s wise to treat SAD and the substance use disorder at the same time, Gandotra said.

    “When one gets worse, the other gets worse; when one gets treated, the other gets better, too,” he said.

    Treatment for Seasonal Affective Disorder

    Treating seasonal affective disorder starts with low-level interventions that are often very effective in improving mood. One of the most well-known treatments for SAD is light therapy.

    “Light therapy is very beneficial,” Burns said. “The brain cannot distinguish the difference of a light box versus the outside light, so [this therapy] is geared towards providing the neurological stimulation that would be provided by natural light.”

    Patients who do light therapy spend time in front of a special lamp that puts off at least 10,000 lux. This can be done while working or watching television, but Burns said that this therapy is most effective during the early part of the day.

    Gandotra recommends another morning intervention — dawn stimulation. Many people have to rise before the sun in the winter, so getting a light that is timed to gradually brighten the room before you wake — mimicking sunrise — can help regulate your body’s internal clock.

    Getting more Vitamin D can also help alleviate symptoms of SAD. One way to do this is by spending more time in the sun. But that can be tough for people in cold, dark climates, so taking a Vitamin D supplement is an effective option. The dosage needed can vary widely, so make sure to speak with your doctor to determine the right dose for you.

    Other treatments for depression — including exercise, mindfulness and psychotherapy — are also used to treat SAD.

    If these non-invasive options aren’t effective, doctors recommend an antidepressant medication, usually an SSRI like Zoloft or Prozac. These are usually prescribed year-round, although the dosage may be reduced or increased depending on the season.

    “Just like major depressive disorder, there is typically a chemical imbalance contributing to the symptoms of SAD that medication aids in correcting,” Burns said. “Some clients need medication to manage the symptoms and others are able to utilize coping skills with therapy to have similar results.”

    No matter what, people who have symptoms of seasonal affective disorder should not hesitate to reach out to their healthcare providers.

    “Seeking help from a professional is the best way to combat symptoms and start feeling better,” Burns said. “As a society we often think of mental health differently than physical health, thinking we should be able to handle it on our own. However, if you have appendicitis, you would not google it and try to fix it yourself. Seeking help shows you are strong and know yourself enough to recognize that you are not feeling well.”

    Have some advice for treating seasonal depression? Please share your tips in the comments.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Opioid Court Aims To Prevent Overdose By Offering Treatment

    Opioid Court Aims To Prevent Overdose By Offering Treatment

    The Rochester-based opioid court offers treatment instead of jail time for minor drug-related offenses.

    A new court program in Rochester, New York aims to save lives by connecting people with opioid use disorder with treatment immediately, lessening their risk of overdose after spending a brief amount of time detoxing in jail. 

    “Their tolerance goes down from their short stay in the jail, and that’s when they use again and fatalities occur,” Monroe County Court Judge John DeMarco, who will oversee the new program, told WHAM.

    Rochester helped lead the national push for drug courts, which offer treatment instead of jail time for minor drug-related offenses. However, the drug court program in Monroe County has a months-long waiting list. Officials noticed that people with opioid use disorder weren’t getting the chance to participate in the program because they often relapsed after being released from jail following their arraignment. 

    To help prevent overdoses, the new program, called Opioid Stabilization Part (OSP), will evaluate people at the time of their arrest and help connect them with immediate treatment. opioid court — as it’s already being called — is meant to serve the people who are most at-risk for overdoses.

    “We have their attention. Having their attention creates maybe the only opportunity that those folks have to commit to get this thing turned around,” DeMarco said. 

    As part of the program, people showing signs of opioid use will be screened at Monroe County Jail the day of their arrest. Those who screen into the program will have their criminal cases put on hold. Instead of waiting for arraignment and being released on bail — oftentimes to return to the community to get high — participants will quickly be seen by a special judge and enrolled into treatment. From there, participants need to check in with the judge daily in person, if they are in an intensive out-patient program. 

    People who do not have insurance will be able to access treatment thanks to a $1.8 million federal grant for the program. 

    Law enforcement said that the people who will use opioid court are often more of a danger to themselves than to others. 

    “We recognize they’re at high risk,” said Monroe County Sheriff Todd Baxter. “That’s exactly what we’re trying to we[a]n out of the jail and put them where they belong, into a bed and treatment program.”

    District Attorney Sandra Doorley said the people in opioid court do not represent a danger to the community. In fact, she said that these people would normally be released from jail, just with less supervision than the opioid court program will provide. 

    “They’re usually given bail, so they’re released (into the community) anyway,” Doorley said. “At this point we’re not allowing violent felons to get into the program.”

    A similar program that launched in Buffalo, New York last year has not lost a single participant to overdose. 

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Senator Cotton Pushes Back On Sentencing Reform Bill With Fake News

    Senator Cotton Pushes Back On Sentencing Reform Bill With Fake News

    The sentencing reform bill (FIRST STEP Act) would lower mandatory minimums for certain drug crimes and eliminate the crack/cocaine sentencing disparity retroactively.

    Despite broad bipartisan support for what could be a landmark shift in federal drug laws, the FIRST STEP Act still has one very predictable, very vocal detractor: long-time drug warrior Sen. Tom Cotton. 

    Even as Democrats, Republicans, the president and the American Civil Liberties Union all come together behind the 103-page bill, the Arkansas Republican has been penning op-eds and tweeting hot takes. 

    “If the bill is passed, thousands of federal offenders, including violent felons and sex offenders, will be released earlier than they would be under current law,” he wrote in the National Review. That’s not entirely true. 

    In fact, the bill would lower mandatory minimums for certain drug crimes, eliminate the crack/cocaine sentencing disparity retroactively, increase reentry funding, require that federal prisons hold inmates closer to home, and mandate the provision of free tampons and sanitary napkins for female prisoners. It would also ban the shackling of pregnant inmates and eliminate the use of solitary confinement for juveniles.

    Some progressives think the measure doesn’t go far enough and, as the Marshall Project noted, some of the provisions include things the federal prison system is already supposed to be doing.

    But when it comes to early release – despite Cotton’s implications – the bill doesn’t include a few dozen serious crimes, such as terrorism and violent gun offenses. It also excludes “those that are organizers, leaders, managers, supervisors in the fentanyl and heroin drug trade,” according to the Washington Post.

    Also, even for those who are able to earn time credit, the chance to get out sooner still lies in the hands of the Bureau of Prisons and its risk-assessment tools.  

    “At all times the Bureau of Prisons retains all authority over who does and does not qualify for early release,” tweeted Republican Sen. Mike Lee, one of the bill’s co-sponsors. “Nothing in the First Step Act gives inmates early release.” 

    The Utah senator laid into his Arkansas colleague, calling Cotton’s tweets on the subject “100% Fake News.”

    The Washington Post apparently concurred, offering a detailed look at the senator’s claims regarding the proposed legislation – and ultimately giving him a two-Pinocchio lie rating

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Dentist Wrote 200 Opioid Prescriptions For Five Patients In One Year

    Dentist Wrote 200 Opioid Prescriptions For Five Patients In One Year

    The dentist who wrote the opioid prescriptions claims state investigator were “telling lies” but he did not provide or clarify any additional details.

    A dentist in Tennessee has had his professional license revoked for reportedly writing approximately 200 prescriptions for opioid medications to just five patients, some of whom were never physically present in his office.

    A discipline report from the Tennessee Department of Health revealed that Michael R. Tittle, 64, who maintained a dental practice in the small town of Erwin, Tennessee, allegedly lacked the proper records to justify writing the prescriptions, which in one case totaled 71 prescriptions for 10 hydrocodone pills over the course of just six months.

    In a statement to the Tennessean, Tittle claimed that state investigators were “telling lies,” but he did not provide or clarify any additional details.

    In addition to the revocation of his license, Tittle was also assessed a civil penalty of $13,000, plus court costs not to exceed $3,000. These details, as well as the allegations against Dr. Tittle, were made public on November 15 as part of a monthly discipline report by the state Department of Health, which maintains public records on doctors and other health care professionals throughout the state. 

    According to the report, Tittle’s office came under investigation after the Department of Health received a complaint about his prescribing practices while on a five-year probation for multiple infection control violations. After reviewing his Controlled Substance Monitoring Database report, the Department requested 13 dental records; these were found to lack “a concise description and justification for the amount and frequency of controlled substances,” according to the report

    Prescription records for five patients were also highlighted in the report; in addition to the aforementioned patient, one patient is reported to have received 49 prescriptions for hydrocodone and 14 prescriptions for oxycodone, totaling 630 tablets, between October 2016 and September 2017.

    Another patient reportedly received 24 prescriptions, totaling 210 tablets, for more than a year after undergoing a root canal, while a third received two prescriptions for oxycodone and two for hydrocodone, all totaling 110 tablets, between August and November 2015, despite the fact that no documentation could confirm that the patient had ever set foot in Tittle’s office.

    The report also noted that Tittle admitted to having a pre-signed, blank prescription slip in his office that had been “copied onto security paper to generate additional pre-signed prescription slips.”

    To settle the case, Tittle agreed to the revocation of his Tennessee dental license as well as $1,000 in civil penalties for each of the 13 records reviewed by the Department of Health and the “actual and reasonable costs” of prosecuting the case. The findings were also reported to the National Practitioner Data Bank.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Woman Sues After Faulty Drug Test Mistakes Cotton Candy For Meth

    Woman Sues After Faulty Drug Test Mistakes Cotton Candy For Meth

    The Georgia woman spent four months in jail because of a faulty roadside drug test mistook her cotton candy for meth.

    A Georgia woman has filed suit after spending almost four months in jail following a faulty roadside drug test that wrongly flagged a baggie of blue cotton candy as crystal meth, according to USA Today.

    Dasha Fincher’s federal legal claim, filed Thursday, targets the county commissioners, the deputies who arrested her and the company that makes the test.

    The arrest that started it all stemmed from a traffic stop on New Year’s Eve in 2016. Two deputies pulled over Fincher and her boyfriend after spotting dark window tints on their car – though authorities later admitted dark window tints are actually legal.

    Police later wrote that the couple seemed nervous, even though they handed over their IDs and agreed to a search of the car. During that search, the lawmen found a plastic baggie with something blue inside. 

    One of the deputies did a roadside test on the hood of the car – and told her he’d found methamphetamine.

    “I knew it was cotton candy,” she told the New York Times, “and for him to come back and say it was meth, I really didn’t know what to say.”

    For close to the next four months, Fincher was held in the county jail on $1 million bail, missing family events – like the birth of her grandsons. 

    “It seemed like everything was going on and I wasn’t there,” she told the Times. “I wasn’t there for my family when they needed me.”

    Then, on March 22 a crime lab finally realized there were no drugs in the bag. But it wasn’t until the following month that the results were finally forwarded to local prosecutors, and on April 4 Fincher was released.

    “It was crystal-like substances, it was in a cellophane bag, and it was under the floor mat,” Elizabeth Bobbitt, the interim district attorney for the area, told the New York paper. “We are not crazy people down here who would like to arrest people for cotton candy.” 

    Roadside drug tests have long been a source of controversy and false positives, as detailed in a 2016 New York Times Magazine and ProPublica investigation

    Based on those $2 tests, officers have wrongly identified everything from motor oil to cat litter to donut glaze as illicit drugs.  

    “Why, it’s almost as if these field tests will say whatever law enforcement officers want them to,” Radley Balko wrote in the Washington Post in 2015.

    In this case, the suit alleges, it was blue food coloring that foiled the test and netted a faulty result.

    The test-maker did not respond to a request for comment.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • UFC’s Jon Jones Is Better But Not Ready For Sobriety

    UFC’s Jon Jones Is Better But Not Ready For Sobriety

    UFC fighter Jim Jones discussed addiction and striving for sobriety in a recent interview.

    Jones says he’s in a “healthy place” while still occasionally drinking and smoking pot.

    Jon Jones has had a controversial career tainted by drug abuse, at one time losing his title and facing an indefinite suspension over a drug-fueled hit-and-run that left a pregnant woman with a broken arm.

    After rehab and finding sobriety, the former champ’s career is slowly coming back to life. However, Jones says that while he’s committed to his health, he’s not staying completely clean. When asked if he considers himself sober, Jones answered no.

    “No, no, I still drink. Smoke pot too every once in awhile,” Jones told ESPN’s Ariel Helwani. “My coaches know I drink, I’m done trying to hide being . . . not like a crazy, crazy amount. Some weekends, mainly on the weekends.”

    But Jones’ moderate use isn’t exactly by choice. When asked if he wants to be completely sober, Jones had a surprising answer.

    “It was something that I was striving for, especially going to rehab this summer, I was striving for complete sobriety,” he told Helwani. “I’m not ready for it. It’s not who I was and not who I am in my life, in my career. And… I’m at a place where I can be honest with myself.”

    The former champ has been in and out of rehab and has faced multiple suspensions from the UFC over his drug use. One of the more public incidents involved a hit-and-run in New Mexico where Jones left a pregnant woman with a broken arm at the scene of the accident in 2015. The incident came a few months after Jones was forced to go to rehab after testing positive for benzoylecgonine, an indicator of cocaine use. Jones only stayed in rehab for one night.

    “I was a guy who loved to party. I was able to win my fights and I felt as though it really wasn’t affecting me that bad. I would go out on the weekend and then on Monday morning I’d be the first guy at practice, working harder than everybody else. So, I felt as though I could get away with that,” he told MMA Fighting in 2015.

    UFC fans will have to wait and see if this round of getting clean will be the time Jones will knock out his problem for good. On December 29, Jones will be fighting for the first time since receiving his 15-month suspension.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Eliza Dushku Celebrates 10 Years of Sobriety

    Eliza Dushku Celebrates 10 Years of Sobriety

    “Buffy” actress Eliza Dushku shared her sobriety milestone on Instagram.

    Eliza Dushku, best known for her roles in the show Buffy the Vampire Slayer and the film Bring It On, is celebrating 10 years sober on Instagram.

    Posting an image of a large Roman numeral X, the 37-year-old actress bubbled with positivity and gratefulness in the caption. “#grateful #sober #X yrs today. holy sh*t. #aa #twelvesteps #willingness a #sponsor #fellowship #service & asking for help #odaat saved my life,” Dushku wrote on the post. “If you’re struggling w #alcohol &/or #drug #addiction, I promise, you don’t have to live that way anymore.”

    She topped off the post with a little encouragement and advice for any of her fans who might be facing the same problems. “Reach out, your life is waiting for you: www.aa.org & www.na.org,” she wrote. Possibly making a reference to her Buffy character’s name, she added “Have #FAITH.”

    Dushku hasn’t always been so public about her recovery. For years, she kept her struggles with substance abuse under wraps, only speaking directly about it for the first time in March of last year at the Youth Summit on Opioid Awareness in New Hampshire.

    “Something a lot of people don’t know about me is that I am an alcoholic and I was a drug addict for a lot of years,” Dushku told a crowd of 8,000 middle and high school students. “You hear people say ‘I am that’ because I am that, and I’m always going to be that, but the difference between me and an alcoholic or drug addict that still drinks and does drugs is that I am sober.”

    Dushku said that she began using drugs when she was just 14 years old.

    “I loved the first time I took a drug because I loved how it made me feel. I loved the way it made me not feel, and I didn’t have to feel,” she recounted to the audience. “It was fun and I loved it, until it wasn’t.”

    Her substance abuse problems got worse, spiraling down until one day her brother stopped allowing Dushku to visit her niece while under the influence.

    “I remember my brother telling me he didn’t want me to be around my niece because he didn’t trust me,” Dushku said. “I’m a really good auntie today. But you know what? He was right. I’m a good person, but when I did drugs and I drank, I didn’t make good decisions. … All it takes is one bad decision. You don’t have to live like that.”

    These days, Dushku is doing better, celebrating 10 years sober as well as getting married in August.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Discover Our Digital Detox and Wellness-Inspired Christmas Gift Guide

    Discover Our Digital Detox and Wellness-Inspired Christmas Gift Guide

    Discover Our Digital Detox and Wellness-Inspired Christmas Gift Guide

    At Time To Log Off, we believe that the best gift you can give this Christmas is the present of your presence. That means unplugging from social media and other digital distractions to really connect with your loved ones. That being said, we know that you generous folk like to spoil your family and friends come the festive season. So, we’ve put together a gift guide with a difference. It’s packed full of present ideas with meaning – from the mindful to the eco-friendly and the well-being focused. Rest assured, the lucky recipients of these great gifts will start 2019 with their best foot forward.

    For Better Sleep

    Offline is the New Luxury Phone Box by Kikki.K

    The blue light emitted from our digital devices can affect the release of the ‘sleepy’ hormone melatonin and disrupt our circadian rhythm (body clock). This means that scrolling on your smartphone in the hours leading up to bed can keep you feeling alert and make it more difficult to fall asleep.

    If you know someone in need of a screen-free night’s sleep, Swedish stationery brand kikki.K’s Offline is the New Luxury wooden phone box is the ideal solution. With an opening for chargers, this stylish Scandi-style box means your recipient can leave their phone out of reach and out of sight at bedtime.

    Deep Sleep Heavenly Candle by This Works

    As well as keeping your device out of reach at bedtime, creating an evening ritual is a great way to prepare for a good night’s sleep. Treat your giftee to This Work’s popular Deep Sleep Heavenly Candle which contains lavender and camomile essential oils known for their relaxing and calming properties.

    For Embracing Creativity

    Bullet Journal

    The bullet journal method, or short-form journal keeping, was created by Ryder Carroll. This mindfulness practice is a great way to reflect on the past, present and future. Yet, some bujo enthusiasts have taken their dotted journals to a new level with beautiful illustrations and doodles. The Leuchtturm 1917 dotted notebook is a popular choice for those getting started – just add pens!

     

    View this post on Instagram

     

    A post shared by The Danish Journal by Mary (@thedanishjournal) on Dec 2, 2018 at 7:37am PST

    Book For Paper Lovers by Flow Magazine

    Flow Magazine’s Book for Paper Lovers is another great gift that encourages mindfulness and creativity. It includes 300 paper items, such as stickers, gift tags, postcards and garlands in Flow’s signature whimsical style of illustration. Their 6th edition is out now and features everything from daschunds to Frida Kahlo.

     

    View this post on Instagram

     

    A post shared by Flow Magazine (@flow_magazine) on Nov 16, 2018 at 6:06am PST

    For Saving The Planet

    Stainless steel reusable bottle by onegreenbottle

    Did you know that around 79% of the plastic produced to date has ended up in landfill or elsewhere in the environment? There’s no doubt that we need to work harder to solve the plastic problem. In addition to plastic waste, there are also concerns around the chemicals found in plastic bottles that can leach into our drinks. To help tackle this issue, onegreenbottle has become one of the leading suppliers of stainless steel bottles in the UK.

    For that friend who is always on the go, treat them to a stylish and durable bottle from onegreenbottle and save them a few pennies in the process by encouraging them to refill, rather than rebuy.

     

    View this post on Instagram

     

    A post shared by one green bottle (@one.gb) on Nov 18, 2018 at 7:43am PST

    Beeswax Wraps

    With similar goals to onegreenbottle, The Beeswax Wrap Co. create a natural alternative to clingfilm and tin foil that ensures chemicals do not leach into foods. Made from cotton, pine resin, organic jojoba oil and UK beeswax, the colourful wraps are both reusable and biodegradable. Skip the plastic stocking fillers and opt for some of these instead.

    For Mindful Moments

    OFF. Your Digital Detox for a Better Life by Tanya Goodin

    Time To Log Off founder Tanya Goodin’s popular book, ‘OFF. Your Digital Detox for a Better Life’, is the perfect stocking filler for the screen obsessed. It’s packed with tips and tricks to help readers find a better balance with technology by reflecting on their own habits. If you know someone who needs a little nudge to put their phone down, this is it!

    digital detox book : OFF

    Tea and Vintage Book Club Subscription by Bookishly

    When settling down with a good book, there’s no better company than a good cup of tea. To encourage more mindful moments and chances for self-care in your giftee’s life, why not treat them to Bookishly’s Tea and Vintage Book Club Subscription? Every month the lucky recipient will enjoy a classic read, some lovely stationery and a good brew. Now that’s a screen antidote!

    Whoever you’re buying for, make this Christmas more meaningful with our list of gift ideas. From the eco-conscious to sleep-saviours, there’s sure to be something for everyone.

    View the original article at itstimetologoff.com

  • Fighting the Drug War in Budget Motels and Prisons

    Fighting the Drug War in Budget Motels and Prisons

    On paper, Nicole’s job is to deliver opioid overdose prevention supplies and make referrals, but in reality, she is a health care worker, mental health counselor, legal advisor, social worker, confidant and more.

    Every morning Nicole Reynolds sits down at her kitchen table with a steaming cup of coffee in one hand and a phone in the other — she is looking at mugshots.

    Scrolling through bleary-eyed photos of last night’s arrestees, she pauses at familiar faces and jots down the names. She checks missed messages on her phone and sometimes combs through the obituaries.

    As an outreach worker with the North Carolina Harm Reduction Coalition (NCHRC), Nicole offers harm reduction services to people who use drugs problematically in Wake and Johnston counties. Through a grant from the Aetna Foundation, she provides free overdose prevention resources and referrals to social services such as housing, medical care, and drug detox.

    It is not easy keeping track of such a transient population; many of her regular participants hang out at budget motels, but frequent police raids scatter them, leaving Nicole to figure out where they landed. So each morning she makes a list:

    Who was arrested last night?
    Who became homeless?
    Who died?

    Rural Outreach: Hope and Risk

    One rainy November afternoon, I join Nicole as she visits her program participants in Johnston County. The 32-year-old is high energy today, exuding the caffeinated vigor of someone who didn’t sleep well and is trying to make up for it.

    “Last night the police raided the hotel where I was doing HIV and hepatitis C testing,” she explains. “I got home late.”

    She winds her long, red dreadlocks absently on her head before letting them fall back to her waist. I wonder, not for the first time, how her small frame holds up the weight of all that hair; she is tiny enough to disappear behind a telephone pole.

    We drive 30 minutes to Johnston County, a rural district rife with dichotomies — fast food chains loom next to empty crop fields and strip club advertisements glitter beside “Jesus Saves” billboards. I ask Nicole to name the towns we pass through, but even she isn’t certain since identical Bojangle’s frame the outskirts of each one. Even the budget motels where we drop off naloxone look alike. Whatever their original colors, each moldy building is now stained with highway exhaust.

    As we drive up to homes and motels, Nicole’s phone rings incessantly. People call for supplies. They call for referrals to drug detox and treatment. They call to ask how to bail a friend out of jail. They call to give updates on their abscess wounds. They call in a panic because someone has nodded off after taking drugs and everyone is afraid to call 911. They call for advice on leaving a violent boyfriend. They call to be tested for HIV. They call to report they just lost their homes. They call because they are lonely and just want to talk…

    On paper, Nicole’s job is to deliver overdose prevention supplies and make referrals to social services. But in reality, she is a health care worker, a mental health counselor, a legal advisor, a social worker, a confidant, and a thousand other job descriptions whose collective weight threatens to crush her.

    “I can’t be everything to everybody,” she tells me, sighing.

    She tries to set boundaries: she doesn’t carry cash, since she is frequently asked for money; she turns off her work phone during non-work hours to avoid the onslaught of calls; she reminds participants that she cannot offer legal advice or perform medical procedures. (But still they ask.)

    As we drive, Nicole frets over her latest dilemma. One of her participants, who recently gave birth, was beaten so badly by her boyfriend that her jawbone shattered. She has asked Nicole to watch her newborn while she gets her jaw wired shut at the hospital.

    “I know I should say no,” Nicole says. She lapses into a rare silence. “But she has no one else.”

    Nicole knows all too well how the stigma of problematic drug use can make someone feel alone. Years ago, she used and sold illicit drugs, even living at some of the hotels we visited. Today, she wears new life on her head—literally. She hasn’t cut her hair since she entered long-term recovery and now the scarlet dreadlocks are long enough to sit on.

    The ability to find and relate to people struggling with chaotic drug use is one of the blessings and curses of hiring current or former drug users as outreach workers. Nicole is uniquely qualified for this job. But she is also uniquely vulnerable to burn-out. It’s hard to say no when you remember how badly you once needed help. And in addition to shouldering heavy workloads and emotional burden, outreach workers are often the most underpaid staff at any organization.

    I marvel at how Nicole remains upbeat amidst the flood of crisis calls from her participants. Even as we visit homes and hotels, the same questions roil her mind:

    Who was arrested last night?
    Who became homeless?
    Who died?

    These questions are heavily intertwined. For opioid users in particular, any period of abstinence drastically increases the risk of overdose death. In fact, every time an opioid user spends a few days in jail without drugs, their risk of overdose spikes to 40 times that of the general population once they get out.

    The War on Drugs: Overdose and Desperation

    Nicole spends her mornings looking at mugshots for a reason. It is difficult for her to know when participants will be released from jail, but once they are, the race is on to find them before the Grim Reaper does.

    The arrest of a high-level drug seller can usher in even bigger problems. When one dealer is taken off the street, users who rely on a steady supply of drugs to ward off withdrawal symptoms are driven to desperation: some will buy drugs from riskier, unknown sources; some will engage in more sex work or petty crime than usual to pay the higher prices caused by reduced supply; some will fall prey to contaminated batches of drugs (as existing supplies are mixed with other substances to spread them over a larger customer base). Overdose deaths usually rise — at least for a few days — until a new dealer takes over, supply normalizes, and business as usual resumes.

    Truly, a single day spent learning supply and demand from Nicole Reynolds can expose the madness of the war on drugs.

    * * *

    Our last stop of the day is the bus station in Raleigh, North Carolina. As we exit the car, Nicole greets a tall, bearded man in a red shirt who has recently been let out of jail. Nicole is pleased that he contacted her during this risky post-release period. She gives him some supplies and advises him to take it slow if he uses drugs again.

    But the next day, the man in the red shirt is dead.

    After reading the news in a text from Nicole, I call to ask how she is doing.

    “I don’t know,” she says. “Maybe if I had followed-up with him this morning he wouldn’t have overdosed…” She catches herself. “No. It’s not my fault,” she adds.

    “Of course not,” I tell her. “We try to help, but most of this is out of our hands.”

    As we hang up, I sigh. Forty times more likely to die after leaving jail. Who can beat those odds?

    I picture Nicole at her kitchen the table this morning, coffee mug in one hand, scrolling through mugshots.

    Who was arrested last night?
    Who became homeless?
    Who died?

    View the original article at thefix.com