Tag: News

  • Experimental Addiction Treatment Program May Soon Lose Funding

    Experimental Addiction Treatment Program May Soon Lose Funding

    The medication-assisted mental health and addiction programs were showing promising results, but are running out of time.

    A federally funded experimental medication-assisted treatment program may be on its last legs, according to The Washington Post. The program, which has shown some promise in combating the opioid crisis in the year it’s been running, could dissolve as soon as March.

    If the program disappears, up to 9,000 patients would suddenly find themselves without a program and around 3,000 clinic personnel would be out of their jobs, according to an analysis by the National Council for Behavioral Health (NCBH). Because the clinics have to give their workers a 60-to-90 day advance notice for termination, the clinics could see staff leaving to seek other jobs as soon as January.

    Combating the opioid crisis has consistently been a bipartisan issue that both Democrats and Republicans have committed to working together on, but funding for the treatment programs was notably absent from Congress’ $8.4 billion budget that was passed in October. Speaking for the NCBH, Rebecca Farley David speculated that Congress got cold feet when they saw the projected cost of funding the treatment package: $520 million.

    “There was a lot of concern in Congress about the overall cost of the package,” she said.

    The program was conceptualized in 2014 through a set of standards, dubbed the Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinics, and was set to receive two years of flexible funding. In its first year of service in 2017, the program served around 381,000 patients according to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. Now, the program is due to expire in Oklahoma and Oregon in March and Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, and New York in May.

    These states are trying to come up with alternate avenues for funding, including Medicaid waivers or applying for grants to keep paying staff after the federal funds dry up.

    It’s not just the patients and clinic workers that would suffer if these programs end. Law enforcement and the justice system also benefited from the program. If officers pick up intoxicated suspects, they cannot rely on these programs and instead have to take the time to drive the prisoner to an emergency room. Inmates being released from Niagara County jail relied on these programs to automatically continue treatment.

    “When people fail to make that first appointment upon release, we’ve lost them,” said Deputy Chief Daniel Engert. “Their condition deteriorates, they reoffend, and then they end up back in jail, or worse, they end up dead.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Devon Sawa Is 12 Years Sober

    Devon Sawa Is 12 Years Sober

    Actor Devon Sawa took to Twitter to celebrate his sober milestone.

    Only someone in recovery would know exactly how many days are in 12 years: 4,380. That’s how many days Final Destination actor Devon Sawa has been in recovery, an accomplishment that he celebrated on Twitter this week. 

    “12 years sober, officially,” Sawa wrote. “This is one tweet in which I declare I’m fishing for compliments. I earned every 4,380 days and it wasn’t easy.”

    Sawa became famous in the 1990s for staring in movies including Casper and Final Destination. However, at just 25 he decided to say goodbye to Hollywood. It was during that hiatus that he got sober. 

    “At 25 years old I stepped away from the business for five years and most of the time didn’t know whether I was going to come back or not,” Sawa told US Weekly last year. “I had done a series of four or five indie movies that I wasn’t necessarily proud of. Some were horror movies. After Final Destination everybody wanted me to do horror movies and some weren’t as good as others. I was just burnt out.”

    He only returned by chance, he said. 

    “I was brought back into the business by accident. Somebody at my agency didn’t get the memo that I quit and sent me an audition and I put myself on tape and that was it,” Sawa said. “I didn’t get it… But I did really well and the casting director wanted to meet me and I did. I thought, ‘You know what, this is what I love. This is what I really want to do.’ So I don’t know why I stepped away in the first place.”

    More recently, Sawa stared alongside Paula Patton in Somewhere Between, an ABC drama. He said that he is glad that a fluke brought him back into the acting business. 

    “I think if somebody hadn’t had sent me that audition I think that I may still be out of it. I was happy what I was doing but I’m happier now. I’m happier back doing what I really love.”

    When asked his on-set must-haves, Sawa insists that he’s simple. 

    “I’m not that guy,” he said. “I just need a place that’s a little quiet before I go in and other than that I don’t have anything that I need. I’m not the Skittles with no red in a bowl or sparkling water kind of guy.”

    As for sobriety, Sawa said this week that his years of commitment have paid off. 

    “To anyone else on this journey just starting out, it’s worth it. My life today has ups and downs, but overall, I’m a lucky man.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Man Says Addiction Was Harder Than 200-Foot Fall

    Man Says Addiction Was Harder Than 200-Foot Fall

    “I’m determined to stay sober and to help someone. Every bad experience in your life can turn into an opportunity, and this is, like, a golden opportunity,” the man said.

    Twenty-one-year-old Daniel Henderson was out enjoying a spring hike in Utah last March when he took an ill-fated step. 

    “The trail just happened to be on the side of a cliff,” Henderson told KSL.com. “I wasn’t doing anything stupid. I just stepped on a rock and the ground gave out because it was thawing.”

    Henderson went careening more than 200 feet down the cliff before landing unconscious in a stream. A helicopter rescue crew took him to the hospital where he was in critical condition. He spent the next two months in the hospital, including more than three weeks  in a medically-induced coma. He broke seven ribs, his wrist and his shoulder, fractured his spine, and had a traumatic brain injury. 

    Still, he said that the nine-month recovery from the fall has not been as difficult as getting sober. 

    “Addiction was honestly harder than falling 200 feet off a cliff,” Henderson said. “I’m determined to stay sober and to help someone. Every bad experience in your life can turn into an opportunity, and this is, like, a golden opportunity.”

    This March, nearly a year after his accident, Henderson will celebrate four years of sobriety. Despite his challenges during this year, he has not had any relapse issues, he said. 

    Henderson said that he was an alcoholic at 16 after taking his first drink at 13. 

    “I had a really bad alcohol problem and I was homeless, sleeping under a bridge in Covington, which is across the Ohio River from Cincinnati,” he said. “I was in and out of psych units, jail. I was miserable. Nobody wanted anything to do with me, and I didn’t think there was a way to get out of it.”

    However, a rehab in California helped him realize that recovery was possible. 

    “That finally helped me get my life together,” he said. “They said that if you just put action into this and do what your therapist is saying and take our advice, things will get better.”

    After treatment he began working in Utah at Wasatch Crest treatment center. He said that his employer supported him through mental health challenges that arose during his recovery. 

    “They set me up for success by sending me out to Utah to treatment and, not only that, they stayed with me through it,” he said. “I could come down there and volunteer and run book studies or shovel snow and earn like $20 — stuff like that, and they were nothing but nice to me.”

    Now, Henderson is learning from his sobriety to help inform his recovery from the fall. 

    “I couldn’t change what happened, but I could change the outcome,” he said. “So I decided to change the outcome.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Can Music Therapy Help Ease Anxiety For Pregnant Women?

    Can Music Therapy Help Ease Anxiety For Pregnant Women?

    Researchers examined whether music could work as a tool to help calm symptoms of anxiety in pregnant women.

    With four prior miscarriages, 42-year-old Elizabeth Larsen of Huntley, Ill., struggled with severe anxiety during her pregnancy. But Larsen says she found relief through music therapy, in which music is used to improve health.

    New research indicates that mothers with anxiety during pregnancy, like Larsen, can benefit from such therapy.

    “I wanted to find wellness tools to ensure that my baby and I would have a safe and wonderful birth,” Larsen told The Washington Post. “Music therapy opened up my bodily senses and helped me to relax.” Recently, researchers studied music and mental health during pregnancy. There were 409 participants, all in their third trimester of pregnancy.

    None had a history of anxiety. Of the group, half underwent music therapy where they listened to a relaxing CD three times per week. The other half of the group did not do so. Upon completion of the study, researchers found that those who had taken part in music therapy were overall less anxious than the other group.

    “During pregnancy, fears and anxieties about the health of the baby are very common. Many of the women in our study were anxious about the stress test, an ultrasound that examines the health of the baby,” lead researcher Jessica Garcia-Gonzalez told the Post.

    She added that the study indicates that “anxiety during pregnancy can increase a woman’s risk of postnatal anxiety and depression, but music therapy can help reduce stress.”

    According to Postpartum Support International, anxiety and depression before and after a child’s birth are not rare. The organization says about 6% of pregnant women and 10% of new mothers struggle with anxiety, and about 15% of women grapple with depression after a child is born.

    Karen Kleiman, a psychotherapist who specializes in maternal mental health, told the Post that it is vital for mothers and pregnant women to seek treatment for such issues. “Anxiety is associated with prenatal health concerns like preeclampsia, preterm delivery, and low-birth weight, which is why it’s important for women to learn coping strategies to minimize their worries during pregnancy,” she said.

    As a board-certified music therapist and birth doula, Kate Taylor told the Post she often provides music therapy for her clients. “I use music as a teaching tool,” she said. “We might analyze song lyrics or listen to instruments or music that can aid in relaxation. Songs can bring up intense emotions for women, which can help them connect with the baby, and openly share their worries and feelings about motherhood.”

    For Larsen, music therapy resulted in a more calming pregnancy overall. “During our sessions, we listened to the acoustic guitar,” she told the Post. “At home, I listened to relaxing music on my headphones. The music calmed my anxiety, which helped me stay positive.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • “The Situation” Celebrates Three Years of Sobriety

    “The Situation” Celebrates Three Years of Sobriety

    The Jersey Shore star is giving back to the community by co-sponsoring an addiction treatment scholarship and sharing his story with recovery groups.

    Reality television star Mike “The Situation” Sorrentino marked his third year of sobriety by bringing holiday meals to individuals in recovery. The Jersey Shore mainstay issued the news via his Instagram page on December 22, where a photo of Sorrentino at Phoenix Recovery House in Eatontown, New Jersey was posted. 

    Despite an impending stay in prison for tax evasion, which will begin in January 2019, Sorrentino has emphasized the positive on his own social media as well as that of the Discovery Institute for Addictive Disorders, a treatment center with which he’s partnered to form a scholarship for individuals battling substance dependency.

    Sorrentino, who struggled with dependency on prescription medication in 2012 and 2015, underwent inpatient and outpatient stays at the Discovery Institute and has continued to work with the non-profit as a speaker at recovery groups. He is also the co-sponsor of Giving Tree, a scholarship program for individuals who lack the funds to go to treatment for drug or alcohol dependency.

    Sobriety was hard fought for Sorrentino at the height of his heyday on the MTV reality series. “I was known to be one of the bigger partiers on Jersey Shore,” he said on a video posted on Discovery Institute’s Instagram page.

    “I’ll be honest. I hated everything about addiction treatment,” he said at a support group meeting earlier this year. “But I wanted better for myself and I was going to be do whatever it takes to get there.”

    With the support of his wife, Lauren Pesce, whom he married in November 2018, Sorrentino has remained sober after his return to television with Jersey Shore: Family Vacation. “Being sober really taught me how to just be at peace,” he said in a 2017 E! News interview. “I live my life today at peace. . . . I mean, everything in my life has changed.” 

    Sorrentino will begin an eight-month prison sentence for tax evasion on $9 million in income on or after January 15, 2019; the sentence also comes with two years of supervised probation.

    After receiving the sentence in October 2018, Pesce addressed the issue in a post on her Instagram page. “Thank you for all of your messages of love and support,” she wrote. “We are happy to put an end to this chapter and excited to move forward in our future.” 

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Thailand To Legalize Medical Marijuana

    Thailand To Legalize Medical Marijuana

    More than 99% of the Thai public supported the measure, according to news reports. 

    As medical marijuana has become widely accepted in the United States, Thailand will become the first Southeast Asian country to legalize the drug’s use in a medical setting. 

    Somchai Sawangkarn, a Thai lawmaker who was involved in the process of drafting the law, said that the change could take place soon.

    “This is a New Year’s gift from the National Legislative Assembly to the government and the Thai people,” Sawangkarn said, according to The New York Times

    Thailand’s National Legislative Assembly voted overwhelmingly in favor of the measure, 166 to zero, with 13 members abstaining. However, before the change can become law, Thai King Maha Vajiralongkorn must approve it. It seems likely that will happen. 

    Cannabis legalization activist Chokwan Chopaka was pleased with the progress, Aljazeera reported

    “This is the first baby step forward,” Chopaka said. 

    Businesses and researchers who want to import, grow or handle medical cannabis will need to be licensed by the government. People who want to use cannabis to treat themselves will need prescriptions. In addition to covering cannabis, the change also covers the medical use of kratom, a Southeast Asian plant some say has medical benefits. 

    Thai business leaders want to protect the medical cannabis market from foreign firms, which they say could easily come to dominate it. Panthep Puapongpan, who runs an integrative medicine company in Thailand, said his company will be asking the government for protections.

    “We’re going to demand that the government revoke all these [foreign] requests before the law takes effect,” Puapongpan said. 

    The Bangkok Post reported that more than 99% of the Thai public supported the measure. 

    Despite the shifting stance on medical marijuana, Thailand is expected to maintain strict penalties for recreational use of cannabis. Thais who are caught with less than 10 kilograms of cannabis can spend up to five years in prison. 

    The Southeast Asian region is known for strict laws around drugs, including the death penalty for users. In August, a man who sold cannabis oil to people with cancer and other illnesses was sentenced to death by hanging after he was convicted of trafficking marijuana

    However, Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad said that the sentence of Muhammad Lukman Mohamad, 29, should be reexamined. 

    “No, I think we should review that,” the Prime Minister said, according to Reuters

    Nurul Izzah Anwar, a member of Parliament in Malaysia, agreed. 

    “From the reports, it looks to be a miscarriage of justice,” she said.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Stephen A. Smith Spouts Stigmatizing Rant About Josh Gordon's Addiction

    Stephen A. Smith Spouts Stigmatizing Rant About Josh Gordon's Addiction

    The controversial host ranted about the Patriots wide receiver battle with addiction and mental health issues on ESPN.

    Perennial hot-take artist and ESPN commentator Stephen A. Smith delivered a baffling on-air diatribe last week, drawing harsh criticism from the Twitterverse for his stigmatizing rant on addiction and mental health issues. 

    Describing drug addiction as “self-inflicted” and refusing to view it as a disease, Smith laid into Patriots Wide Receiver Josh Gordon on Thursday following the announcement that Gordon planned to step away from the game to take care of his mental health. 

    “I’m disgusted,” the First Take host said on the air afterward. “I’m sick and tired of this guy getting chances.” 

    Smith continued on and on, in a seemingly interminable stream of vitriol, calling out the 27-year-old for taking Xanax in middle school and offering baffling gems like: “I understand it’s sad that he’s an addict, but it appears he’s an addict. That’s what this comes down to.” 

    In a separate, shorter clip from Thursday’s ESPN, Smith said he didn’t want to seem “unsympathetic” before questioning whether addiction is a disease and seemingly blaming Gordon for becoming addicted. 

    “I don’t want to come across as harsh or unsympathetic to Josh Gordon,” Smith said. “But let’s be very, very clear here. You’ve got a whole bunch of people out there talking about ‘It’s a disease, it’s a disease’ because it’s an addiction.

    “Well, I’m not going to debunk or eliminate the notion that it’s a disease, but how did it become one? Because you can’t get addicted to something you never try. This isn’t cancer. This isn’t Alzheimer’s disease, dementia or something like that. This is self-inflicted.”

    The video clip circulated online, where it was not at all popular, as social media users and other sports analysts thoroughly dragged Smith for his hottest of takes.

    “This is a HORRIBLE take from Stephen A Smith on mental illness and addiction,” tweeted CBS Sports writer Will Brinson. “I’m absolutely appalled this aired on television.”

    Armen Keteyian concurred. “So now he’s a mental health expert,” tweeted the executive producer for The Athletic. “I happen to know something about this situation and this is Completely irresponsible.” 

    Following a series of suspensions, Gordon was indefinitely suspended from the NFL on Thursday for repeated drug violations. Announcement of the suspension came hours after he announced his departure on Twitter.

    “I take my mental health very seriously at this point to ensure I remain able to perform at the highest level,” he tweeted. “I have recently felt like I could have a better grasp on things mentally. With that said, I will be stepping away from the football field for a bit to focus on my mental health.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Could Higher Taxes Affect Binge Drinking?

    Could Higher Taxes Affect Binge Drinking?

    A new op-ed makes the case that higher taxation could reduce excess drinking. 

    Decreasing the amount of binge drinking in the country could be as simple as increasing taxes, according to a recent piece by The Washington Post editorial board.

    The board notes that 60 years ago, about 40% of American adults smoked cigarettes, whereas fewer than 20% do today. According to the board, this decrease has to do with the increase in cigarette taxes — and binge drinking should be treated in a similar manner. 

    The board cites a Johns Hopkins study from this year, which examined two tax increases in the state of Maryland. One was a 50% increase in alcohol sales tax in 2011 (bringing it to 9%), and the other was doubling the excise tax on a pack of cigarettes, bringing it to $2. In both cases, the board writes, consumption of the products went down quickly.

    “Opponents of such increases are often quick to denounce nanny-state politics, but government has a responsibility to promote public health,” the Post board wrote. “Cigarette and alcohol consumption exact a terrible toll, and not just on users; witness the impact of binge drinking on families and children, not to mention the carnage on the nation’s highways attributable to drunken driving.”

    More specifically, the study determined that in Maryland in 2015, retailers sold about 30% fewer packs of cigarettes than in 2007, which was the year before the excise tax was put into effect. Researchers determined that much of that decrease came quickly after the price increase. The change also affected minors, as researchers state teens who said they had smoked at least one time in the past 30 days decreased in that same span of eight years. 

    When it came to the increase in alcohol tax, the results were similar. According to the editorial board, researchers in another study examining police crash reports in Maryland found that the number of teenagers in alcohol-related crashes decreased by 12% annually in 11 years from the tax increase. Among drivers as a whole, the decrease was 6% annually. 

    The Johns Hopkins study also determined that alcohol intake decreased, as researchers said adult binge drinking in the state dropped by 17%, five years after the alcohol tax was enacted. 

    According to the board, those who oppose such increases may not be thinking about the whole picture. 

    “Among the arguments from opponents of such taxes is that they fall disproportionately on low- and middle-income people,” the board writes. “That’s true. It is also true that by reducing consumption (which weighs on wallets), they relieve the burden of long-term health care costs on those same people. That’s part of the compelling argument for public-health taxes, and why lawmakers are justified in imposing them.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • The State Of Harm Reduction Around The Globe

    The State Of Harm Reduction Around The Globe

    A new report breaks down the status of harm reduction programs around the world. 

    Even as opioid use continues wreaking havoc on some parts of the globe, the availability of harm reduction measures worldwide are relatively stagnant, as documented in a massive new report released this month.

    The number of countries with needle exchange or opioid substitution treatment has stayed relatively stable over the past four years, and a lack of funding in middle- and low-income countries has stunted the growth of service options available in some of the places most severely impacted, according to the “Global State of Harm Reduction” 2018 report issued this month by Harm Reduction International

    But there’s a significant exception to that trend: North America. Here, as opioid overdose figures rise, the harm reduction response is blossoming. Naloxone access, fentanyl testing strips, and needle exchange programs have become more common in the US and Canada – all possible signs of forward-thinking responses to a well-documented crisis. 

    “The US now has the fastest annual percentage rise of drug-related fatal overdose ever recorded,” the report notes, “with an increase of 21.4% between 2015- 2016 alone.” 

    Currently, the United States has 335 needle exchanges – a 37% increase since the last harm reduction report. Meanwhile, Canada has taken harm reduction efforts a step further, opening a total of 26 supervised injection sites. That sort of progressive action is still barred by federal law in the US, though some communities have considered addressing it both legislatively and in local action plans.

    There are, of course, still significant gaps. The availability of harm reduction in prisons is “woefully inadequate, falling far short of meeting both international human rights and public health standards,” according to the report. 

    And, despite the response in North America, service offerings worldwide have stayed more stagnant.

    “While our coverage of harm reduction policies and services has evolved and broadened in scope, the same cannot always be said for harm reduction in practice around the world,” the report notes. “Despite [the] heavy burden of diseases, effective harm reduction interventions that can help prevent their spread are severely lacking in many countries.”

    Currently, 86 countries offer some sort of needle exchange program – down from 90 in 2016. Bulgaria, Laos and the Philippines have shuttered their exchange programs in the face of punitive drug policies, while Argentina and Brazil have stopped offering such services as the number of injection drug users falls in those nations. 

    While the number of countries that offer exchanges has fallen slightly, the number with opioid substitution drugs available has gone up a bit. Since 2016, Cote d’Ivoire, Zanzibar, Bahrain, Kuwait, Palestine, Argentina and Costa Rica have all introduced or re-introduced medication-assisted treatments. 

    Overall, methadone is still the most commonly prescribed of those treatments, with buprenorphine falling into second place. Despite research espousing the use of heroin-assisted treatment as a harm reduction option, it’s only available in seven countries: Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, Switzerland and the UK. Though that’s still considered a radical option in many countries, it’s just one of the solutions experts have increasingly examined as more potent drugs continue appearing in underground supply chains.

    “The rise of illicit fentanyls themselves is just about the clearest case one can make for harm reduction: despite a literally poisonous supply, millions of people are still taking street opioids in an underground market that lacks quality control,” journalist Maia Szalavitz wrote in an introduction to the report. “It’s hard to argue that anything short of providing a safer supply – both through traditional medications like methadone and buprenorphine and via prescription heroin, hydromorphone (Dilaudid) and perhaps others – will be able to end the crisis, if done to scale.”

    And, aside from the continued toll of opioid use, amphetamine use is on the rise as well – but harm reduction options for speed users “remain underdeveloped,” according to the report. Safe consumption sites – in the regions where they’re available – continue to focus largely on injection use, leaving out those who smoke or snort their drugs. And, free drug testing services are limited mostly to festivals and clubs. 

    “While this all paints a bleak picture of harm reduction worldwide, there are examples of innovation and perseverance in this report that give hope and demonstrate that progress is possible,” the report’s authors wrote. “It is important, too, to not overlook the fact that harm reduction has come a long way over the past two decades. The evidence is clearly in favour of harm reduction. It is time that more countries acknowledge this and implement the services that are proven to advance public health and uphold human rights.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Illegal Marijuana Exporters Thrive In Colorado

    Illegal Marijuana Exporters Thrive In Colorado

    Authorities and regulators admit that this rise in black market activity is partly a growing pain, resulting from unforeseen consequences of legalization.

    The relaxed attitude about marijuana use has emboldened some growers and dealers who do business without a license.

    Legalization was supposed to kill the black market for marijuana, creating avenues for official businesses that would raise some tax income for the state of Colorado. However, some dealers have chosen to stay in the black market, taking advantage of the new, relaxed attitude towards the drug to expand their illegal grow and deal operations.

    “We thought that the black market would disappear,” said Gov. John Hickenlooper. “Evidently it contracted and then began to expand again, and that’s counter-intuitive, right? It is not what you would expect.”

    Colorado voted to legalize the drug in 2013, reasoning that jailing citizens over a relatively harmless drug was doing more harm than good. The state allows people 21 years of age or older to buy or grow reasonable amounts of marijuana. But despite these good intentions, some have taken advantage of the new, destigmatized political climate to upgrade their operations to the point where they are “just like a corporation,” according to Bob Troyer, Colorado’s former US attorney.

    These organizations also smuggle the goods outside to illegal states. Authorities have found contraband Coloradoan marijuana in more than 34 states. The pot can be traced back to huge illegal grow operations found in state parks, farmland or even inside neighborhood homes. A significant portion of the marijuana black marketeers hail from outside the United States, from places as far as Mexico, Cuba and even China.

    “The thing that nobody predicted (was that) normalization, commercialization, would be a magnet for international black market activity,” explained Troyer.

    Authorities and regulators admit that this rise in black market activity is partly a growing pain, resulting from unforeseen consequences of legalization.

    “I think one of the mistakes that was made in Colorado and some other states is allowing for home cultivation,” said Chris Woods, who founded a marijuana grow and retail business called Terrapin Care Station. “What we’re seeing right now is a lot of clean-up from the mistakes that have been made.”

    At least one regulation has been overturned and cleaned up since legalization: the 99 plant rule. Originally, the state allowed medical marijuana patients, and their caregivers, to store and grow up to 99 plants.

    “I think the 99 plant thing really opened the floodgates. No other states (allowed) any numbers like that,” said DEA agent Kevin Merrill. “Outside organizations took advantage of that … If you got 10 people signed up, you effectively could have 999 plants in a residence.”

    Authorities believe that as long as there is demand from illegal states, the black market will continue to grow.

    View the original article at thefix.com