Archive for December, 2011

20
Dec

Understanding The Causes Of Substance Abuse

As a form of abuse, substance abuse is a disease and not just an addiction. Substance abuse ranges from adults to teenagers alike. People abuse substances like alcohol and illegal drugs for many reasons that are complicated. It is clear that our society pays a significant cost.

Linked to child abuse, substance abuse has also been linked to prisons, mental health institutions, hospitals and emergency room visits. Abuse can also be linked to murders, deaths and suicides. It is a very common addiction that effects many people nation-wide and abroad. Abused substances such as cocaine have been on the decline, while drugs such as heroin and acid are reaching a critical point of abuse.

Abused substances may impair and have effects on driving, jobs and daily activities as simple as getting up in the morning. Other effects can be shaking and tremors, stumbling, intoxication, and difficulty concentrating. Many substances of abuse have withdrawal problems such as that seen with tobacco products. The substance abuser may find they are easily angered, violent and have tremors, depending on the drug involved.

18
Dec

Prescription Drug Addiction is Producing Heroin Addicts

There was no way the relative could have identified these a tragedy was feasible.

 

The obligation for Emily’s tragic death lies with a system that continues to give the edge to revenue relatively than patient safety.

 

Initially in this scenario of guilt is the immensely wealthy Massive Pharma, an sector driven much more by stock values than by making certain patient basic safety, or making certain that challenges are well-known by every person who should know — physicians, patients and drug regulators.

 

17
Dec

Prescription Drugs Can Cause Accidents

The US legal system is having trouble determining how to appropriately arraign wrongdoers that operate a vehicle under the unacceptable influence of prescription drugs. The problem stems around the notion that many of the offenders are abusing drugs that are actually legally prescribed to them. This issue makes it quite difficult to establish the drug levels found in subjects, and to establish proper boundaries for prescribed limits. A recent article by The New York Times investigates the different difficulties of this recent struggle. For our purposes, the effect drugged-drivers have on construction accidents and construction injuries will be examined.

The debate on how to enforce this issue really centers on how to define inappropriate levels of legally prescribed drugs. Construction workers are usually aware of policies banning certain medications at the workplace, despite their general legality. But how can this extend out to the general populace with regard to the act of driving? Mark Neil, senior lawyer at the National Traffic Law Center, frames the debate this way, “How do we balance between people who legitimately need their prescriptions and protecting the public? It becomes a very delicate balance.”