Tag: News

  • Philadelphia Clears Out Another "Heroin Camp" As Winter Hits City

    Philadelphia Clears Out Another "Heroin Camp" As Winter Hits City

    It’s the third homeless camping spot cleared out in the Kensington neighborhood in recent months.

    Last week, police in Philadelphia shut down another of the city’s so-called heroin encampments, forcing the area’s homeless from under a railroad bridge and urging them into a local shelter. 

    It’s the third homeless camping spot cleared out in the Kensington neighborhood in recent months, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer, and the forced relocation comes just as the city’s settling in for the cold with the first snowfall of the season. 

    Residents at the encampment were warned last month that they’d need to move, but a few dozen were still on scene Thursday when police, outreach workers and homeless advocates showed up to supervise the relocation. 

    Close to 40 people agreed to enter the low-barrier shelter, a place where residents don’t have a strict curfew keeping them inside at night and they aren’t required to stop using drugs, the newspaper reported. 

    In some parts of the city, the opioid-addicted homeless population has surged in recent months, the Inquirer wrote in September. In Kensington, the number of people living on the street more than doubled in the course of a year, bumping up from 271 in 2017 to 703 a year later, authorities said. 

    “We certainly recognize that things have gotten worse, that the neighborhood is under siege,” Brian Abernathy, the city’s first deputy managing director, told the Inquirer. “People are suffering. We have to do better, and we’re exploring new approaches. We expect to have something soon.”

    The uptick in Kensington homelessness comes even as homelessness in the rest of the city appears to be declining. City officials accounted for 1,355 people living on the street in August of this year, an increase from the 983 counted at the same time last year. 

    The increase in Kensington alone could account for all of that, and officials said the uptick isn’t simply the result of displacement from other areas of the city. 

    “It’s not just a reshuffling,” said Liz Hersh, the city’s Office of Homeless Services director. “It’s an influx.”

    Now, with the clearing of the Frankford camp under the tracks, there’s only one big homeless hotspot left in the neighborhood—the Emerald Street encampment.   

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • "Weeded Out" Game Show Aims To Educate Teens About Cannabis Use

    "Weeded Out" Game Show Aims To Educate Teens About Cannabis Use

    Some of the show’s target audience of young people have questioned whether Weeded Out presents all sides of the argument for or against marijuana use.

    The city of Denver, Colorado has launched a new marijuana education initiative aimed at providing teenagers with facts about cannabis use, as well as related health and policy issues.

    The campaign takes a decidedly different approach than previous programs: it’s a game show called Weeded Out, which quizzes teen contestants on marijuana fact and fallacy.

    As both High Times and CBS This Morning noted, the game show—which is reportedly funded by tax revenue from cannabis sales in Denver—underscores the city’s hopes that marijuana education programs can contribute to a decline in cannabis use among teenagers. But the show’s target audience of young people has questioned whether Weeded Out presents all sides of the argument for or against marijuana use.

    Weeded Out—which airs on social media—follows a traditional quiz show structure, with a panel of teenage contestants answering questions about marijuana. Those that answer incorrectly are “weeded out” until a final group of nine players is left. As High Times noted, the show adopts a Jeopardy-style format, with contestants fielding questions until a final winner is declared.

    Education programs like these make a difference, according to Ashley Kilroy, executive director of marijuana policy for the city. According to her, recent statistics show that the number of young people who report using marijuana over a 30-day period has dropped from 26% to less than 21% over the last two years—a trend also echoed in other states where marijuana is legal. “The numbers are showing that use has dropped significantly,” she said.

    But CBS This Morning found that the focus and tone of the questions asked on the show skew towards the risks involved in cannabis use, and do not always address possible medical benefits. Both the homepage and the Facebook page for the initiative, called High Costs, appear to lean towards a fairly gloomy view of marijuana use; videos on the latter address the connection between cannabis and bronchitis, performance and reaction time, depression and other issues.

    Students have picked up on the tone as well. “There’s obviously medical benefits to it, otherwise it wouldn’t be legal,” said high school junior Isaiah Diaz. “It’s not properly balanced.” Senior Hana Elghoul echoed his sentiment: “I think they are afraid to tell us the good side, just because they think it might influence the way with think,” she said. “They might encourage us to use it.”

    Some teachers who have observed the program and students’ reactions to it also feel that a more balanced approach could have greater impact on its audience. “I think at the end of the day, they want the whole truth,” said North High School teacher Vince Trujillo. “If you were able to bring both sides, I think more students would be in tune with that.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Ashley Tisdale Reveals Depression & Anxiety Struggles On New Album

    Ashley Tisdale Reveals Depression & Anxiety Struggles On New Album

    “This is the first time I’m being super vulnerable. This is me sharing my journey through anxiety and depression.”

    Ashley Tisdale, who first broke through starring in High School Musical, is now confessing her years long battle with anxiety and depression in a new album, aptly titled Symptoms.

    Tisdale told People that with Symptoms, “This is the first time I’m being super vulnerable. This is me sharing my journey through anxiety and depression. I didn’t know the anxiety symptoms I had in the past while touring. Before, I would freak out before going on stage. That was a panic attack. I had no idea what that was until I started reading about it.”

    About the lead single from the album, “Voices in My Head,” Tisdale explains, “There are so many times I’m at an event or even just a social party and I feel like I’m not good enough to be there, and I feel that a lot of us struggle with that. That negative thinking, that little voice in your head…”

    Tisdale hopes her new album will help erase the stigma around mental health issues. “The reason I wanted to do this album was because I wanted to make someone at home not feel so alone in what they go through. They could look at me and go, ‘We’re all human. We all go through things.’”

    Tisdale adds, “It’s so easy for people when someone goes, ‘Does anyone have anxiety?’ Everyone at the table will go, ‘Yeah, I do.’ If someone says, ‘Do you have depression?’ Nobody really wants to talk about it.”  

    She also told AOL, “I feel really vulnerable talking about it, and it’s weird to talk about it, but if I could make someone at home feel less alone, then I’m doing my job as an artist. I’ve gone through a journey. It’s obviously painful and hard, but it’s also the most beautiful thing.”

    When recording the album, Tisdale called the studio “my happy place,” and “my safe place” where she could be creative, and she called recording Symptoms “therapeutic. I feel like it saved me from just dwelling in what I was feeling.”

    And through the process of recording Symptoms, Tisdale learned to accept and embrace herself. “I think that when you struggle with those things, instead of being like ‘Oh I hate that stuff,’ I really accept it. I think that’s what makes you beautiful, that you’re not perfect.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Norman Reedus Fundraises For Children’s Medical Cannabis Treatments

    Norman Reedus Fundraises For Children’s Medical Cannabis Treatments

    The Walking Dead star is taking aim at cancer by raffling off signed memorabilia.

    Walking Dead star Norman Reedus, known for wielding a crossbow against hordes of the undead on television, is setting his sights on childhood cancer. In support of Saving Sophie, a non-profit organization dedicated to supporting children and adults who need medical cannabis treatments, Reedus is raffling off Walking Dead merchandise that he’s autographed.

    The move is something of a rerun as Reedus raised funds for CannaKids last year. For this fundraiser, participants can pay a minimum of $5 for a raffle ticket. The money will go to Saving Sophie, which will use the proceeds to expand the organization’s medical cannabis research program to a yet-to-be-determined university in southern California.

    Currently, Saving Sophie has four children and four adults participating in their research who are using medical cannabis treatments alongside conventional cancer treatments like chemotherapy or radiation.

    Saving Sophie was created by the parents of Sophie Ryan, whose story is featured in the documentary Weed the People. The documentary explored the lives of families who have turned to medical cannabis to treat their child’s cancer.

    While the stigma surrounding providing children with marijuana-based treatments has not dissipated, some research has shown that such treatments have been effective in combating glioblastoma, a brain cancer. Sophie Ryan’s own glioma tumor shrunk by 90% with a combo treatment of chemotherapy and cannabis oils.

    Despite these early indicators of effectiveness, critics and detractors stand in the way simply on the virtue of the medicine being marijuana-based. Some debates have arisen over whether pediatric patients should be allowed to bring their medical cannabis to school and use it there. The stigma also forces some parents to turn to shady pathways to get their hands on the potentially life-saving medicine for their children.

    Improving the public perception of medical cannabis may be one of the most important contributions Reedus is making with his new campaign. Advocates believe such a celebrity endorsement aimed at saving the lives of children is likely to get the attention and support of the general public.

    Reedus isn’t the only cast member of the Walking Dead franchise who has done their part to fight negative stigma in health treatment. Kevin Zegers spoke openly about his sobriety on Entertainment Tonight Canada.

    “The reason I go to an AA meeting on my birthday—the reason we’re urged to do that—is not for you, but you do it for others, to indicate it’s possible, which in the depths of addiction doesn’t feel possible,” he explained in the interview. “I think it’s our duty, even with, you know, a very small amount of fame, which I sometimes have, to go, ‘Oh s***, that guy suffers, too.’”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • FDA Wants To Ban Menthol Cigarettes

    FDA Wants To Ban Menthol Cigarettes

    The Food and Drug Administration believes that flavored products are too appealing to teens.

    The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is moving to restrict the sale of flavored e-cigs and cigars as well as ban menthol cigarettes outright.

    Last Thursday, the FDA released a detailed proposal for its proposed policies. FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb said the move is meant to stop teens from picking up smoking. These three flavored products are popular with young people, making it too easy to start smoking thanks the sweet or cool flavors.

    “Today, I’m pursuing actions aimed at addressing the disturbing trend of youth nicotine use and continuing to advance the historic declines we’ve achieved in recent years in the rates of combustible cigarette use among kids,” explained Gottlieb.

    Cigarette smoking rates are lower than ever in the United States, but thanks to vaping being massively popular, nicotine addiction remains an imminent threat to youths today.

    Particularly concerning to the FDA is a 78% increase in e-cigarette use among high schoolers and, alarmingly, a 48% increase in e-cigarette use among middle schoolers between 2017 and 2018.

    “These data shock my conscience,” said Gottlieb.

    Menthol has long been a target of the FDA. Public health officials believe that thanks to the menthol counteracting the harshness of the smoke, menthol cigarettes make it easier to start smoking.

    “I believe these menthol-flavored products represent one of the most common and pernicious routes by which kids initiate on combustible cigarettes,” Gottlieb said.

    The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) supported the FDA’s endeavor to ban menthol cigarettes as they are popular among black Americans.

    “For decades, data have shown that the tobacco industry has successfully and intentionally marketed mentholated cigarettes to African Americans and particularly African American women as ‘replacement smokers,’” an NAACP statement read.

    Cigarette manufacturers predictably did not warm up to the idea.

    “We continue to believe that a total ban on menthol cigarettes or flavored cigars would be an extreme measure not supported by the science and evidence,” the Altria Group Inc., which produces Marlboro Menthol, wrote in a statement.

    Anti-smoking advocates like Matthew Meyers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, welcome the move but believe a total ban on flavored e-cigs would do much more to stop teens from getting hooked on nicotine.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Sex Addiction May Affect More People Than Previously Thought

    Sex Addiction May Affect More People Than Previously Thought

    Researchers examined the rates of sexual compulsion between the genders for a new study on the prevalence of sex addiction.

    More people than previously thought could be dealing with sex addiction, or at least sexual compulsions, according to a new study.

    The research, published in the JAMA Open Network, found that 8.6% of Americans may struggle with compulsive sexual behavior, defined as “distress and impairment associated with having difficulty controlling one’s sexual feelings, urges, and behaviors.”

    Researchers surveyed 2,000 individuals representative of the U.S. population to get that number.

    Although sex addiction is frequently talked about in the media and there are 12-step groups dedicated to helping people recover from it, sex addiction is not actually a diagnosable condition, according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5).

    However, for the study, researchers were interested in finding out how many people reported “failing to control one’s sexual feelings and behaviors in a way that causes substantial distress and/or impairment in functioning.”

    They acknowledged that the study might exaggerate the problem of sex addiction by labeling people with mild problems as being addicted, but pointed out that regardless, the study indicates that sexual compulsions are playing a big role in many people’s lives.

    “The high prevalence of this prominent feature associated with compulsive sexual behavior disorder has important implications for health care professionals and society,” they wrote. “Health care professionals should be alert to the high number of people who are distressed about their sexual behavior, carefully assess the nature of the problem within its sociocultural context, and find appropriate treatments for both men and women.”

    The team found that compulsive sexual thoughts affected both sexes more evenly than previously considered: While 10% of men reported having compulsive thoughts, 7% of women did as well, suggesting that 40% of people contending with this issue are female.

    “Gender differences were smaller than previously theorized, with 10.3% of men and 7% of women endorsing clinically relevant levels of distress and/or impairment associated with difficulty controlling sexual feelings, urges, and behavior,” researchers wrote.

    They theorized that women might be experiencing increasing rates of intrusive sexual thoughts: “Given recent cultural shifts toward becoming more permissive of female sexual expression and the proliferation in accessibility to sexual imagery and casual sex through the internet, software applications, and social media, one possible explanation for the smaller gender differences found in our study is that the prevalence of difficulty controlling sexual behaviors among women may be increasing,” study authors wrote.

    The study also found that compulsions were highest among people with less than a high school education, those with very high or very low income, racial and ethnic minorities, and people who identified as LGBTQ. The researchers called for further research into the social components of sex addiction.

    View the original article at thefix.com

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  • New Jersey Sues One Of Its Largest Employers Over Opioids

    New Jersey Sues One Of Its Largest Employers Over Opioids

    The lawsuit alleges that Janssen Pharmaceuticals minimized the risk of opioids and targeted older patients who were less aware of the dangers of the drugs.

    The pharmaceutical industry is a major economic driver for the state of New Jersey, but that did not stop the state’s attorney general from launching a lawsuit against Janssen Pharmaceuticals, one of the state’s largest employers, over its marketing practices around opioids.

    “It is especially troubling that so much of the alleged misconduct took place right here in our own backyard,” New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir Grewal said at a news conference, according to the New York Times. “New Jersey’s pharmaceutical industry is the envy of the world, with a long history of developing vital, lifesaving drugs. But we cannot turn a blind eye when a New Jersey company like Janssen violates our laws and threatens the lives of our residents.”

    The lawsuit alleges that Janssen minimized the risk of opioids, targeted older patients who were less aware of the dangers of the drugs, and made an effort to “embed its deceptions about the viability of long-term opioid use in the minds of doctors and patients.”

    The lawsuit focuses on the eight-year period that Janssen marketed two opioid products — Nucynta and Nucynta ER — before selling the rights to those medications for more than $1 billion in 2015. 

    Grewal said that the company intentionally fostered misinformation about those drugs. 

    “They funded bogus research,” he said. “They pushed bogus theories like pseudo-addiction, things that have been debunked. They positioned Nucynta and Nucynta ER as the safer alternative to other more powerful opioid drugs and, as the director mentioned, in fact, they were the same types of opioid drugs.”

    The lawsuit points out reportedly egregious prescribing practices, including one patient received 125 prescriptions for two opioids in just one year, totaling a 2,700-day supply of opioid pills. The doctor who wrote those prescriptions had taken hundreds of visits from Janssen representatives, the lawsuit said. 

    The pharmaceutical industry in New Jersey has shrunken slightly amid the opioid crisis, but still makes up about 8% of jobs in the state. However, Grewal said that did not factor into his decision over whether or not to pursue a lawsuit. 

    “We’re not shying away from holding folks accountable,” Mr. Grewal said. “If they’re culpable, we’ll hold them accountable.”

    This is the first time that New Jersey has taken legal action against a company based in the state, the New York Times reported. However, it’s not the first opioid-related lawsuit in the state. Former Governor Chris Christie’s administration launched legal action against Purdue Pharma and Insys Therapeutics, another opioid manufacturer. 

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • What Jeff Sessions’ Departure Means For Marijuana

    What Jeff Sessions’ Departure Means For Marijuana

    Sessions’ departure has left some people wondering if President Trump may change his stance on marijuana legalization.

    When President Trump demanded the resignation of Attorney General Jeff Sessions last week many people were alarmed, but proponents for marijuana legalization saw Sessions’ departure as good news.

    “It’s a step in the right direction,” Andrew Jolley, president of the Nevada Dispensary Association, told the Las Vegas Sun

    Sessions was staunchly against cannabis, having famously said that “good people don’t smoke marijuana.” During his tenure as attorney general he repealed the Cole Memo, an Obama-era document that acknowledged the Justice Department’s limited resources and instructed US Attorneys avoid prosecution in areas where marijuana was legal in some form, according to Forbes.

    Despite his tough stance, Sessions was not able to do much to target the cannabis industry because of The Rohrabacher-Blumenauer Amendment, an amendment to the federal budget that specifically bars the Justice Department from spending money to enforce a ban on medical marijuana in states where it is legal.

    Following Sessions’ resignation on Wednesday morning, stocks in cannabis companies soared, with the marijuana index rising nearly 14% in two hours, according to Newsweek

    Sessions’ departure left some people wondering if President Trump would change his stance on marijuana, perhaps even removing the drug from the list of Schedule I substances with no medical benefit.

    “I think he’s waiting for after the midterms,” Anthony Scaramucci, former White House communications director, recently said.

    During the midterms, Michigan became the 10th state to fully legally recreational cannabis, and medical marijuana programs were established in Utah and Missouri. In addition, polling shows that two-thirds of Americans — including a majority of Republicans — support legalizing marijuana

    Sessions was replaced by his former chief of staff, Matthew Whitaker. Although it’s not clear what Whitaker’s stance on marijuana is, during his time as a U.S. attorney in Iowa, he worked to “reduce the availability of meth, cocaine, and marijuana in our communities,” according to his resignation letter from 2009.

    In 2014 when Whitaker was running to represent Iowa in the Senate, he said that he had sympathy for people who received relief from cannabidiol (CBD), and support the states CBD-only medical marijuana law. 

    “Families are going to be positively impacted by what happened in the state Senate,” he said. “And I applaud them for helping those families who need that help.”

    However, he added that the state should not establish a medical marijuana program while cannabis remained illegal under federal law. When he was asked whether Congress should legalize marijuana, Whitaker’s opinion wasn’t very clear.

    He said that the federal government “should regulate things that harm people,” like “hard drugs and the like,” but didn’t say whether he thought marijuana fit that description. However, he did talk about the dangers of a black market cannabis trade.

    “I saw the impact of marijuana on our border,” he said. “If you go to any of the counties in Texas where there’s an illegal importation of marijuana, there’s a tremendous amount of violence.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Inside Switzerland's Addiction Treatment Experiment

    Inside Switzerland's Addiction Treatment Experiment

    One Swiss organization is finding success with a treatment model centered around medical-grade heroin

    With some treatment models still offering fairly dismal success rates, specialists are broadening the parameters of what successful treatment looks like. In Switzerland, an injection center attached to the Geneva University Hospitals is conducting an experimental heroin-prescription program (PEPS). Patients addicted to heroin check in daily for their Swiss laboratory manufactured diacetylmorphine, or heroin.

    Switzerland’s 1,500 patients at 22 PEPS centers have all failed previous attempts to end their heroin addiction with drug-replacement therapy. Patient Marco, aged 44, was quoted in The Nation: “Methadone didn’t work for me. The side effects were terrible, and I didn’t get any tranquilizing effect. So I was taking other drugs on top of it. I’ve been registered here for the last six months. I’ve put on weight, and cut my heroin use by 80%. Eventually, I want to get clean.”

    Here is a new model for success: instead of complete and immediate sobriety, the goal is to slowly wean the patient off of heroin, while also providing treatment for the underlying issues of addiction during the course of the program.

    Meanwhile, the patient is receiving medical-grade heroin at highly controlled doses and is in much less risk of dying from an overdose, and at no risk of contracting a disease (such as HIV) or dying from tainted drugs or dirty needles. The patients are also much less likely to be involved in criminal activity around their drug addiction. The program offers “an easier, softer way” toward sobriety.

    Yves Saget, an addiction nurse, told The Nation, “Addiction happens when taking drugs becomes the only strategy for dealing with difficult situations. We don’t say ‘fix’ here, we say ‘treatment. The brain becomes dependent, and needs heroin to maintain its balance. At this center, we are treating 63 patients with diacetylmorphine. Medical heroin is pure, unlike the drug you buy in the street, which is cut with caffeine, paracetamol, and other substances. Street heroin isn’t satisfying, so addicts often take other narcotics with it, or alcohol, or psychotropic drugs such as benzodiazepine. Our dosage, which is individually tailored, allows patients to live as normal a life as possible.”

    Switzerland had a crisis in the 1980s when heroin use suddenly rose dramatically. The Swiss police tried to limit the criminal issues arising around this drug use by confining heroin uses to areas that soon became known as “needle parks.”

    The Swiss government decided they must act. Ruth Dreifuss is a Social Democratic former president of the Swiss Confederation. She told The Nation that at the time of the peak crisis, “We created a forum that brought together the federal state, the cantons, and the affected cities to allow the different actors to get to know each other’s viewpoints. Open drug scenes couldn’t be allowed to continue, but shutting them down would mean finding other solutions. Everything we’d tried had failed. The doctors prescribing methadone suggested allowing them to prescribe heroin. Methadone has been prescribed in Switzerland since the 1960s, so we were mentally prepared.”

    So began Switzerland’s program of prescribing heroin to people with addiction for whom replacement therapy had failed. A four-pillars policy was created, including prevention, therapy, risk reduction, and repression. The first injection centers for prescription heroin opened in 1994, most of them in Switzerland.

    Today, public hospitals as well as private, state-funded centers run the injection centers.

    The program has been a success. Drug-related crime has seen an “exceptional reduction,” according to a study by the University of Lausanne’s Institute of Forensic Science and Criminology. The number of people with addiction involved with police interaction has fallen by two-thirds.

    “Crime linked to heroin has almost disappeared because the drug is now available for free,” Regula Müller, social-affairs counselor for the city of Bern, told The Nation.

    In addition, heroin dealers have lost their customer base, and prices of the drug are low, making selling heroin a less attractive gamble. The personal gain for those addicted to heroin and those who love them have been enormous, with HIV positive rates at less than 10%, from 50% in the ’90s. And numbers impossible to argue with: drug-related deaths of those under 35 years old fell from 305 in 1995 to 25 in 2015.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • SNL's Darrell Hammond Chronicles His Journey To Sobriety In New Doc

    SNL's Darrell Hammond Chronicles His Journey To Sobriety In New Doc

    “The drinking calmed my nerves and quieted the disturbing images that sprang into my head… when drinking didn’t work, I cut myself,” Hammond reveals in the documentary. 

    Former Saturday Night Live cast member, master impressionist and current announcer Darrell Hammond detailed his struggles with mental illness and drug and alcohol dependency in his 2011 memoir, God, If You’re Not Up There, I’m F*cked: Tales of Stand-Up, Saturday Night Live, and Other Mind Altering Mayhem.

    Now, a new documentary follows Hammond as he transforms his experiences into a one-man show. Cracked Up finds Hammond delving deeper into his past to find the humor in his pain, and in doing so, unearths memoirs of abuse as a child that gave root to his dependency and illness.

    The documentary – directed by Michelle Esrick, and co-produced by Chris Hegedus and D.A. Pennebaker of The War Room fame – provides plenty of examples of Hammond’s self-effacing humor – in a stand-up performance, he recounts the story of drinking absinthe in Mexico and a subsequent stay in a south-of-the-border jail which provided him with the title of his memoir – and testimony to his brilliance as an impressionist from SNL producer Lorne Michaels, among others.

    Footage of his iconic take on Bill Clinton is also included, but the documentary appears to be less about Hammond’s past accomplishments than his present endeavors, and in particular, the years of treatment for alcoholism and drug addiction.

    After four decades of diagnoses, Hammond finally met a mental health professional that pointed to childhood trauma as the root of his issues. But as Steve Higgins – a writer and producer on SNL and the announcer for The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon – states in the documentary, Hammond could only recall flashes of these experiences. Through therapy and alternative treatment like meditation, Hammond was able to address his past abuse – which, as he detailed in his memoir, included stabbings, beatings and electric shocks at the hands of his mother – and the self-medicating he previously undertook to subdue those memories.

    “I kept a pint of Remy at my desk at work,” he wrote. “The drinking calmed my nerves and quieted the disturbing images that sprang into my head… when drinking didn’t work, I cut myself.” Hammond’s condition worsened over the next decade, culminating in a forced hospitalization in 1998 and cocaine and crack cocaine use in the 2000s. Eventually, he found relief from treatment for his various dependencies and the diagnoses of childhood trauma.

    The trailer for “Cracked Up” concludes with Hammond practicing meditation and musing about the meaning of the word “namaste.” The word has many definitions, depending on one’s practice, but a common explanation is, “The divine in me honors the divine in you.” After a pause, he adds, “Do you think there is such a place?” 

    View the original article at thefix.com