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Law & Ethics

You are currently browsing the articles from Methadone and Heroin Facts matching the category Law & Ethics.

Alcohol, tobacco more harmful than cannabis, LSD, ecstasy: study. Thoughts?

phdpsychman asked:


Alcohol is nearly as harmful as heroin and tobacco is more dangerous than cannabis, LSD or ecstasy, according to a new classification table of drugs published in The Lancet medical journal Friday.

The table, drawn up by a group of leading British scientists, ranked heroin, cocaine, barbiturates and street methadone as the most harmful drugs, closely followed by alcohol in fifth place.

Tobacco was assessed to be the ninth most dangerous drug behind ketamine — commonly used as a horse tranquilizer — benzodiazepines, which are prescription tranquillisers, and amphetamines.

Cannabis was said to be the 11th most harmful. LSD was ranked 14th and so-called “clubbers’ drug” ecstasy in 18th, or third last, place.

The classifications were based on individual drugs’ so-called “harm scores” — the physical damage to the user; how likely the drug was to induce dependency; and the effect of its use on families, communities and society.

Each of the three categories was split into nine categories of risk and independent experts including psychiatrists, chemists and forensic scientists ranked each category on a scale from 0 (”no risk”) to 3 (”extreme risk”).

Heroin scored 2.7 on the harm scale with alcohol just under 2. Tobacco scored 1.7 and ecstasy scored just over 1.1.

One of the scientists, Professor Colin Blakemore, the chief executive of the government-funded public health body the Medical Research Council, said their findings differed markedly from the existing drugs classification in Britain.

“Alcohol and tobacco are way up there in the league table, with alcohol being not very far behind demonised terrors of the street like heroin,” he said.

His colleague, Professor David Nutt, from the University of Bristol, western England, said isolated cases of unpleasant and unpredictable responses to drugs were allowed to dictate policy.

“A more scientific view is that these risks have to be assessed against their effect on the whole population,” he added.

Possessing Class A drugs like heroin, cocaine and crack, ecstasy and LSD currently carries a maximum seven-year prison sentence; cannabis is a Class C drug, while alcohol and tobacco are unclassified.

Blakemore said he hoped policy makers would “take note” that their table differed substantially from the official classification, which a separate British study published on March 8 also criticised as inadequate.

The RSA Commission on Illegal Drugs, Communities and Public Policy said Britain’s drug laws should be replaced by a system recognising the harm to health of substances like alcohol and tobacco rather than crime prevention.
The study that was done developed a new classification system for drugs. It’s designed to be a more scientific and evidence-based system of classifying drugs then the current system used in the UK which is arbitrary and has little scientific basis.
this is the summary from the study:

Drug misuse and abuse are major health problems. Harmful drugs are regulated according to classification systems that purport to relate to the harms and risks of each drug. However, the methodology and processes underlying classification systems are generally neither specified nor transparent, which reduces confidence in their accuracy and undermines health education messages. We developed and explored the feasibility of the use of a nine-category matrix of harm, with an expert delphic procedure, to assess the harms of a range of illicit drugs in an evidence-based fashion. We also included five legal drugs of misuse (alcohol, khat, solvents, alkyl nitrites, and tobacco) and one that has since been classified (ketamine) for reference. The process proved practicable, and yielded roughly similar scores and rankings of drug harm when used by two separate groups of experts. The ranking of drugs produced by our assessment of harm differed from those use

subutex detox

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Written by Admin on June 17th, 2009 with 6 comments.
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violent heroin addicted father wants visitation rights?

Ouroboros asked:


talking to the mother this some the things she has said:

its all documented already; his addictin/ violence/ felons..he is in a kinda detention center half way house right now..since he got out of prison down state..but he gets released sometime this month but hhas a proabtion situation still

I had a restraining order from last i saw him when we lived togetehr 2 or omore yrs ago..cuz i flushed his smak and he choked me …so…yeh..and she was home,too..not good..

thas the basiss of my perspective; he like..tried killing me..ya know? he has trhreatned to take her from me by force before. now he was hi when he said it, but still..i dont deal well w threats. i dont forget a threat…dont trust people anymore after that

he had been in and out of the methadone clinic..used to sell his methadone or leave it laying aroundf the house for a infant to find,lol, dumbass..one tint tiny droplet of that coul d have killed her.

he taking her to court for kid, she stop him?

methadone rehab

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Written by Admin on March 20th, 2009 with 1 comment.
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What is your viewpoint on NARCOTICS?

Sunny P asked:


That includes morphine, heroin (the most commonly abused),Codeine, Oxycodone, Vicodin, Fentanyl, Methadone, Acetaminophen, Hydromorphone

This is for a powerpoint presentation im doing on narcotics. I need the views and opinion of other people

thanks in advance

rapid opiate detox

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Written by Admin on February 2nd, 2009 with 2 comments.
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Can a jail really legally withhold your Methadone if you are in a treatment program?

jessica asked:


When I went to jail, the jail doctor cruelly said “We don’t give Methadone here. We’ll give you something for withdrawl (which is something that doesn’t help with the agony but just your heart rate) but you just have to deal with it.” Methadone withdrawl is hell and worse than Heroin. Have you ever seen the movie, “Ray”? Well, that’s an accurate depiction. I got on Methadone to get off Heroin and it’s been wonderful. I hate that it is addictive but it is the only thing that I’ve tried that has worked after years of addiction. If I had to withdraw in jail, I would go back on Heroin as soon as I got out plus it’d be disruptive to my treatment and counseling. I recently got arrested for an OUI, I missed one day of Methadone which I could deal with but if they give me time, I won’t make it. It’s cruel and unusual punishment and I’d rather be corporally punished by caning! Who do I talk to get this to be a law that you can’t deny someone their Methadone? I want to change this!

addiction opiate treatment
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Written by Admin on September 16th, 2008 with 5 comments.
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Can a jail legally withhold you from taking a prescription drug?

jessica asked:


I am on Methadone and they wouldn’t give it to me in jail. It causes Extreme withdrawl and I think that’s cruel and unusal punishment. I go to a clinic every day a mile from the jail and someone could bring it. Is there a law somewhere about withholding meds. like this? Like I said, the withdrawl is unbearable and worse than Heroin.

opiate detox
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Written by Admin on June 20th, 2008 with 6 comments.
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