Category: Addiction News

  • 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

  • Casey Affleck Opens Up About Ben's Alcoholism Struggle, Rehab Stay

    Casey Affleck Opens Up About Ben's Alcoholism Struggle, Rehab Stay

    “I think for his kids’ sake and for their mom, and for himself, he’s trying to do the work and get it together.”

    Actor and director Casey Affleck, brother of Ben Affleck, opened up about his brother’s ongoing struggle with alcohol, also revealing that it’s a family issue. He said that he and his brother “come from a long line of alcoholics.”

    “Ben is an addict and an alcoholic. Most of my grandparents are alcoholics. My father is an alcoholic, as bad as you can be, and he’s been sober for about 30 years,” Affleck, who is “about six years” sober, told ET.

    The Justice League star was admitted to a treatment facility in late August, with the support of estranged wife Jennifer Garner. The actor and director’s relapse attracted plenty of media attention as he sought treatment for the third time. Onlookers speculate that Affleck’s personal life, including a recent break-up, threw his recovery for a loop.

    His brother Casey says he is lucky to have “the kind of resources and time” to go to a good facility and get help.

    “It can’t be easier to have everybody looking at you and taking your picture as you’re walking out of an intervention. I don’t envy that. I saw my father struggle with it for many years and nobody was following him around with cameras and stuff,” said Casey. “It’s not a great look. But on the other hand, it’s nothing to be ashamed of and it’s good that he’s taken care of.”

    Ben sought treatment in 2001 and then in 2017. In March 2017 he released a statement via Facebook announcing that he had completed treatment for alcohol addiction.

    “I have completed treatment for alcohol addiction; something I’ve dealt with in the past and continue to confront,” he wrote. “I want to live life to the fullest and be the best father I can be. I want my kids to know there is no shame in getting help when you need it, and to be a source of strength for anyone out there who needs help but is afraid to take the first step.”

    His brother Casey says his family is the driving force of his recovery. “Alcoholism has a huge impact on not just the person, but also their family,” he told ET. “So, I think for his kids’ sake and for their mom, and for himself, he’s trying to do the work and get it together.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Best Indie Films of 2018: The Fix Picks

    Best Indie Films of 2018: The Fix Picks

    In early recovery I had moments where I was sure I could not stay sober for one more minute. That’s when my friends offered sound advice: Don’t think, and go to movies.

    In early recovery I found myself inundated with obsessive worries scurrying around in my head. It was repetitive dark noise that I ached to shush with alcohol. At times I was sure that I could not stay sober for one more minute. That’s when my friends offered sound advice: “Don’t think, and go to movies.”

    So, as we head into fall with the looming Nov. 6 midterms, a real-life nail biter, let’s talk about the great escape—indies!

    This first film is an uplifting true story about an exceptional human being. He is a creative philanthropist with an unexpected approach to helping people with addiction and ex-cons who are way down on their luck.

    Skid Row Marathon is about a superior court judge in Los Angeles. Craig Mitchell is a one-man crusade helping addicts and ex-cons who live in tents and cardboard boxes on LA’s Skid Row. The worst part of his day job is sending criminals to prison. The compassionate judge came up with a way to have a positive impact. He gets the homeless back on their feet with a running club.

    Wife-and-husband team, Gabi and Mark Hayes, heard about the judge who trains the homeless to run marathons.

    Mark told The Fix. “Many of the homeless are on drugs—crack, heroin, crystal meth, alcohol, you name it. Gabi and I wanted to do something [to help]. My wife is the real runner. Me? I go kicking and screaming.”

    When the couple first approached Judge Mitchell about doing a documentary, Mark said Mitchell’s response was, “’You can’t just show up with a camera and start filming people at the lowest point of their lives.’”

    “The judge was right,” said Mark. “At first, some threw bottles at us. But we hung in there and put in the time to get to know them until they felt safe enough to speak to us. We were there to help, not exploit them.”

    The response to their film has been high praise and enthusiastic reviews.

    “I think [the film] resonates with so many audiences because people know everybody deserves a second chance,” said Gabi. “The homeless situation is heartbreaking and it keeps getting worse. More and more tents keep popping up and there are people lying in the streets. They just took a wrong turn in life.”

    Runners find purpose when they show up to run with the judge and are treated with respect. Their self-image improves which helps them to get off and stay off the drugs. Skid Row Marathon has raked in 21 awards at film festivals across America—including Best Director, Best Editing, and multiple audience awards. To find out how to see it, visit the website.

    For this next winner, it doesn’t matter if you weren’t born yet or if you can’t remember a thing about the 60s and 70s because you were too damn high. Any age is the right audience for this one.

    Nico, 1988 is about the last year in the life of German model-singer-actress Nico (neé Christa Päffgen). Her glory had faded long ago, as did her exquisite beauty. She looked ravaged beyond her years due to her 15-year heroin addiction. In one scene, Nico (Trine Dyrholm) is sharing a cigarette with a friend.

    “Am I ugly?” She asks. He jokingly replies: “Yeah. Really.”

    “Good,” she says. “I wasn’t happy when I was beautiful.”

    In her teens she was a model for Vogue and Elle which led to acting in a number of films. But Nico is best known as Andy Warhol’s muse and as a singer for the Velvet Underground. Lou Reed wrote the band’s revolutionary lyrics about heroin, prostitution, and sadism.

    In 2003, that first album ranked number 13 in Rolling Stone magazine’s “500 Greatest Albums of All Time.” If Nico had been alive to see that, she would not have been impressed.

    “I don’t need everybody to like me,” she says in the film. “I don’t care.”

    She says in the movie that Jim Morrison suggested that she form her own band. When asked if she’s disappointed that her band never had commercial success, she rasps “I hate the word commercial.”

    Smartly directed by Susanna Nicchiarelli, Nico, 1988 is a fiery and fascinating study of another rock and roll tragedy. Though there’s nothing glamorous about watching someone eaten away by drugs, it was a great reminder to stay sober. Don’t miss the explosive tour de force by Dryholm. It brings chills.

    After I gave up substances, I became aware of—and had to let go of—magical thinking. Ironically, my next pick is about two dreamers who built a fantastical world that sparkled like a disco ball:

    Studio 54

    In Manhattan, 254 West 54th Street was the place to be. Studio 54 opened in 1977 and it was a smash hit—a nightly revelry of drinking, drugging and disco dancing. We’re talking gobs of cocaine, mountains of Quaaludes, and A-listers. Everyone else had to wait outside hoping they would be allowed in.

    Owners Steve Rubell and Ian Schrager, two Jewish guys from Brooklyn, became great friends at Syracuse University. Rubell’s charisma was always on but Schrager avoided attention—until now. The 71-year-old finally told details from 40 years ago that nobody has ever heard. Director Matt Tyrnauer got his hands on loads of never-before-seen footage.

    The owners were not prepared for the club’s instant success. It became a haven for celebrating sex and drugs. You’ll see Rubell zipping around, spoiling his guests, flashing open a long coat to reveal a drugstore in pockets—a smorgasbord of chemical delights.

    Rubell paid steeply for his 24/7 bacchanal. So, although the flick triggered my euphoric recall—wild nights hoovering cocaine, glugging Bacardi and dancing all night—I also remember what it cost me. I’m lucky—I did survive, hey, hey.

    The following film is about an unusual triangle between a girl and a “good” mother (the only mom she’d known) and an alcoholic stranger that kicks off a psychodrama.

    Daughter of Mine (Figlia mia) is a fictional story set on the coast of Sardinia, Italy. Two women, adoptive-mom Tina (Valeria Golino) and alcoholic biological-mom Angelica (Alba Rohrwacher), compete for the love and attention of 10-year-old Vittoria (Sara Casu).

    The shy, fair-skinned, redheaded girl had no idea that she was adopted. Heavy drinker Angelica has a life that is totally unmanageable. She’s being kicked off a farm for not paying her bills, but before slinking out of town, this “bad” mom begs adoptive mom Tina to let her spend time with Vittoria. Tina, who is compassionate but wary, finally agrees. She thinks What’s the harm? Angelica will be gone soon.

    Vittoria, however, is enchanted by her wild birth mother that looks so much like her. As they bond, Tina’s anxiety skyrockets. The story is at times predictable but that doesn’t take away from its emotionality or the power of the acting.

    Italian director Laura Bispuri described it as “three characters who are all placed in a conflict that…breaks their heart.”

    The thoughtful, slower pace of a European indie is refreshing. The backdrop of rural Sardinia, with its cliffs, expansive sky and turquoise water, adds to the film’s richness. After the U.S. debut at Tribeca, Strand Releasing purchased this touching award-winner, which is now available on Netflix and DVD.

    This next indie won the top award at this year’s Tribeca Film Festival for Best Narrative Feature. It also won Best Screenplay and Best Cinematography. All prizes are well-deserved.

    Diane stars Mary Kay Place as a sad, retired widow (badly in need of Al-Anon, if you ask me) who exhausts herself by putting the needs of others first. Her mess-of-a-son Brian (Jake Lacy) is a man-child who’s in and out of rehabs and opiate stupors. It’s maddening to see what she puts up with. Both actors give industrial-super-strength performances, as does the rest of the cast which includes Estelle Parsons and Glynnis O’Connor. Diane is the first narrative feature for documentarian Kent Jones (Hitchcock/Truffaut) who wrote and directed. Jones is also Director of the New York Film Festival at Lincoln Center. Martin Scorsese is executive producer.

    Diane spends her days schlepping long distances, performing good deeds. She feeds the homeless at soup kitchens, visits sick friends, and tends to her dying cousin and the rest of the extended family. She meets her klatch of old friends for lunch, where she has angry outbursts (Oh, Diane! Get thee to Al-Anon). The actress is a master at comedic nuances. Her self-blame is a mystery until the satisfying reveal and her character’s profound spiritual arc. IFC bought the film. Theater release date to be announced.

     

    Mary Kay Place in Diane

    Next is an award-winning narrative feature from the UK. It’s got the right ingredients: excellent writing, directing, acting, and cinematography—all in the first sequence. Clever, subtle hints show the audience what they need to know about the year (2011), the place (London), and the protagonist.

    Obey is explosive. Nineteen-year-old Leon (Marcus Rutherford) has been gone for four years. He came home to care for his alcoholic mother (T’Nia Miller). But there is one condition: she has to stop drinking. The good news is that his father is gone. Bad news? His mother replaced Leon’s abusive dad with a creepy, scary boyfriend who enables her addiction.

    Leon likes to hang out with his friends, box at the gym, and inhale nitrous oxide from balloons. Things intensify when he meets the movie’s female lead, Twiggy (Sophie Kennedy Clark). She’s a blonde with big blue eyes and luscious full lips. Leon is transfixed but femme fatale Twiggy has a boyfriend. Leon’s tension builds. It’s all too much and he is going to blow. Leon hates his mother’s boyfriend and her alcoholism, and outside is the chaos of the 2011 London Riots. Director James Jones uses actual news footage seamlessly. To find out how to see it, visit the website.

    Blowin’ Up is a documentary about sex workers who are caught in the legal system. Many who end up in “the life” have substance use disorders. Director Stephanie Wang-Breal presents their gripping stories without judgment as the film zeroes in on an experimental program in a Queens court. The compassion in the film is its biggest strength. The heroes are an empathic team of women, including a judge and DA, who work diligently to help the workers find a new start. Counseling is used to help them fight their way off of drugs and out of the life-sucking cycle of turning tricks, getting arrested and seeing their lives circle the drain. This solution-oriented program offers a chance at redemption. The new approach toward an age-old problem appears to be working. It is inspiring and brings hope for America’s failing justice system where recidivism is commonplace.

    [Allison: What do you think of these 2 quick mentions as blurbs with internal links as a Sidebar?]

    Pssst. Don’t miss these options:

    Roll Red Roll is a documentary directed by Nancy Schwartzman. It tells the horrifying story of a sexual assault case that took place in Steubenville, Ohio. Male high-schoolers, clearly intoxicated, were caught on cell phone videos, laughing about raping a teenage girl while she was in and out of consciousness. Much of the town mocked her on social media and sided with the local boys. She was ridiculed for being drunk. It’s a powerful film that shines the light on how vulnerable one is when intoxicated. Crime blogger Alexandria Goddard broke the case. The hacking group Anonymous became involved in order to fight for justice. If you ask me, not enough justice was served.

    Read more: Roll Red Roll

    Jellyfish is a fictional story about Sarah Taylor (Liv Hill), an overburdened teenage girl living in Margate, a dreary seaside town in England. Her mother, Karen (Sinéad Matthews), stays in bed all day while Sarah rushes her younger siblings, boy and girl twins (Henry Lile and Jemima Newman) to school. Sarah pedals madly on a bicycle with the youngsters seated in a makeshift wooden trailer that’s hooked to the back. It’s a sad rickety setup that instantly conveys how poverty stricken they are.

    Read more: Jellyfish Captures the Reality of Growing Up with a Mentally Ill Parent

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • New Dosage Strength Of Opioid Addiction Drug Approved By FDA

    New Dosage Strength Of Opioid Addiction Drug Approved By FDA

    The FDA commissioner noted that the approval will expand access for patients and reduce drug development costs.

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved a new dosage strength for a maintenance drug for the treatment of opioid addiction.

    Cassipa, which is a sublingual (applied under the tongue) film that combines the opioid treatment drug buprenorphine and the opioid overdose reversal drug naloxone, will now be available in a 16 milligrams/4 milligrams dosage, and according to FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb, should be used in conjunction with counseling and therapy.

    The new dosage strength is approved by the FDA in both brand name and generic versions, and in various strengths.

    The approval underscores the agency’s emphasis on greater development of and access to medication-assisted treatment (MAT) for substance use disorder. The full range of MAT is a key element of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Five-Point Strategy to Combat the Opioid Crisis, and was the focus of guidelines issued to drug manufacturers for evaluating the effectiveness of new or existing MAT products. 

    In a statement issued in April 2018, Gottlieb described the FDA-approved MAT drugs—methadone, buprenorphine and naltrexone—as “safe and effective in combination with counseling and psychosocial support to stabilize brain chemistry [and] reduce or block the euphoric effects of opioids.”

    The FDA has also cited statistics from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), which found that patients using MAT for opioid dependency have reduced their chance of overdose death by half.

    In addition to its suggested efficacy for opioid use disorder, Gottlieb noted that newer treatment options like the increased dosage strength for Cassipa will not only “broaden access for patients,” but may also “reduce drug development costs, so products may be offered at a lower price to patients” via the agency’s “streamlined approach to drug development for certain medication-assisted treatments that are based on buprenorphine.”

    This approach is the abbreviated 505(b)(2) pathway under the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, which allows manufacturers to use the FDA’s findings regarding the safety of their product to grant approval.

    The FDA is advising that Cassipa should be used in conjunction with a complete treatment plan that includes counseling and other support, and should only be used after the patient is introduced to the drug and stabilized up to a dose of 16 mg of buprenorphine using another marketed product. Additionally, Cassipa can only be prescribed by Drug Addiction Treatment Act-certified prescribers.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Man Sentenced For Role In Amtrak Drug-Trafficking Ring

    Man Sentenced For Role In Amtrak Drug-Trafficking Ring

    The man helped direct the shipment of thousands of kilograms of heroin and cocaine from Los Angeles to Chicago. 

    A California man was hit with a 35-year prison sentence last week for his role in overseeing an international drug-running ring on Amtrak train lines, according to court records.

    Edgar Roque headed up the cocaine-dealing crew for at least six years, shipping thousands of kilograms of illicit drugs from Mexico across the United States.

    “This is criminal conduct of the worst kind,” federal prosecutor Paul H. Tzur wrote in a sentencing memorandum. “Edgar Roque’s leadership role directing the mass movement of heroin and cocaine into the Chicago area and elsewhere showed that he had absolutely no regard for the safety and well-being of addicts and the communities into which he delivered the drugs.”

    With at least 20 confederates—including men with names like “Lil Pimp” and “Traps”—Roque hauled in wholesale amounts of heroin and cocaine from cartel-level suppliers in Mexico, authorities said.

    After getting the drugs to California, Roque would have them shipped to Chicago where his accomplices would pick them up at Chicago’s Union Station and disperse them to stash houses across the Windy City. 

    After off-loading the goods, the lieutenants in Roque’s criminal circuit would hop on a commercial airline and fly the cash proceeds west, typically carrying $150,00 at a time.

    A multi-agency task force probed the underbelly of the organization for years, under the aegis of an investigation known as “Operation Derailed.”

    Months after the 32-year-old pleaded guilty to drug and money laundering charges, a federal judge on Tuesday sent him to prison. A number of Roque’s associates have either pleaded guilty or already been sentenced.

    Phillip Diaz netted more than 20 years in prison for helping ensure delivery of the drugs and maintaining bank accounts to launder the proceeds, prosecutors said.

    Anthony Koon of Colorado got nine years in prison for delivering almost 20 kilograms of heroin valued at around $1 million. Gerardo Sanchez of California helped launder the profits and accepted delivery of heroin to a Tinsley Park hotel room, which netted him a 17.5-year sentence. 

    Jorge Luis Ochoa-Canela was sentenced to five years behind bars for moving massive amounts of money back to suppliers. And Amtrak employee Roy Griffin netted an 18-month sentence for scheming to steal a package of cocaine arriving into Union Station. 

    Four other defendants have pleaded guilty and are scheduled for sentencing before the end of the year. 

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Dealers Remain An Issue On Instagram Despite Crackdown Efforts

    Dealers Remain An Issue On Instagram Despite Crackdown Efforts

    The company is now working to make treatment options more readily visible as well with their new “Can we help?” pop-up.

    After repeatedly fielding allegations that their platforms helped fuel the opioid crisis, Facebook and Instagram are now taking extra steps to combat social media drug-selling and help divert users into treatment. 

    Last month Facebook announced plans to redirect drug-seeking social media users to a help box offering support suggestions and, months after blocking targeted hashtags, Instagram recently decided to take a similar approach. 

    “As part of Instagram’s commitment to be the kindest, safest social network, we’re launching a new pop-up within the app that offers to connect people with information about free and confidential treatment options, as well as information about substance use, prevention and recovery,” a spokesperson for the photo-sharing platform told TechCrunch in a statement.

    Social media community guidelines generally ban selling drugs online, but dealers have brazenly skirted those guidelines and the law, listing their goods online with relevant hashtags to attract would-be buyers.

    The growing trend sparked condemnation from Food and Drug Administration commissioner Scott Gottlieb earlier this year. 

    “Internet firms simply aren’t taking practical steps to find and remove these illegal opioid listings,” Gottlieb said in a speech at the National Rx Drug Abuse and Heroin Summit in April, according to Engadget. “There’s ample evidence of narcotics being advertised and sold online. I know that internet firms are reluctant to cross a threshold, where they could find themselves taking on a broader policing role. But these are insidious threats being propagated on these web platforms.”

    Instagram initially responded by shutting down potentially problematic search phrases like #fentanyl and #oxycontin—but dealers just shifted to unblocked hashtags instead.

    Then in August, Facebook took action by adding a “Can we help?” pop-up offering links for treatment referrals to anyone searching certain drug-related phrases like “buy OxyContin” or “buy Xanax.” At the same time, the company blocked words like “OxyContin” and “Xanax” from turning up any search results for Pages and Groups. (However, it’s still possible to find profile accounts with drugs included in the user name—such as the many users who simply list “Oxy Contin” as their names.) 

    Then in recent weeks, Instagram reevaluated its blocking-only approach.

    “Blocking hashtags has its drawbacks,” Instagram told TechCrunch. “In some cases, we are removing the communities of support that help people struggling with opioid or substance misuse.” 

    Although those blocked hashtags will stay blocked, now the company is working to make treatment options more readily visible as well with their new “Can we help?” pop-up.

    View the original article at thefix.com