Opioid Essay

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    More and more people are sucked into the horrible addiction. An addiction is an actual disease that occurs in the brain. Many times these drugs affect the brain and in result, cause the addiction to occur. More and more there are people coming into the hospital from a heroin overdose, are released from the hospital, go back out, and inject the drug. The drug is so powerful that these individuals do not see what is happening to them as they slowly kill themselves. There are multiple drugs that are

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    Naltrexone is an FDA-approved non-opioid medication to prevent relapse after opioids have been completely eliminated from the body. Unlike, methadone and buprenorphine, it has no addiction potential. Naltrexone reduces cravings and blocks the “high” should the recovering addict relapse. Naltrexone best serves patients who have completed other treatments, such as detoxification, medication-assisted treatment with methadone, medication-assisted treatment with buprenorphine, or rehabilitation. It

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    ADDICTION IDENTIFICATION Katie suffers from an addiction to prescription medications: Opioids. “Opioids, mostly prescribed to treat moderate to severe pain, include drugs such as OxyContin and Vicodin” (http://www.hhs.gov/asl). When Katie attended the residential treatment center she seemed to do well with the program but did not do any follow-up, counseling, or self-help treatments afterwards (Case Study 3). "Opioid

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    Opioids are given to patients who are in intense amounts of pain since the pills have morphine-like effects. However, according to Nora D. Volkow M.D, the increase of prescription opioids has nearly quadrupled since 1999. This has lead to more and more addictions and dependence on these drugs, regardless of the consequences. The most common forms of opioid painkillers are Oxycontin, Vicodin, and Hydrocodone. Taking opioids as prescribed is not an issue, however

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    Part A How does the disease model of addiction differ from the moral model of addiction? The disease model of addiction and the moral model of addiction provide completely different explanation for the tendency of substance abuse. The disease model of addiction predates to 1784 when the American physician Benjamin Rush published a pamphlet which discussed alcoholism in medical terms and outlined treatments for what he considered was a “disease” (Atkins, 2014, p. 52). This model of addiction generally

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    for no obvious reason. There are not many treatment options for people who suffer from chronic pain. The most common treatment is with painkillers—usually opioids. The problem with opioids, however, is that they’re highly addictive, which is something that wasn’t known until fairly recently. It’s also why Canada is now going through an opioid crisis. Patients who are suffering from chronic pain and who don’t want to run

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    highly prevalent in certain areas. The heroin epidemic is sweeping across the Midwest, and claiming the lives of young white males. It is very different from the 1960’s use of heroin, and is now typically used because of its low cost and previous opioid addictions to other prescription drugs. Young white males in many different communities are becoming hooked because of the careless use of pain pills prescribed or taking them from parents’ medicine cabinets. The communities include rural towns, big

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    prescription drugs allow for a multitude of quick benefits, doctors are beginning to unnecessarily overprescribe medications to their pediatric patients. Of these prescription drugs, opioid pain killers, antibiotics, and psychiatric medications are the most commonly overprescribed in child care. For example, opioid prescriptions have increased 300 percent in the past seventeen years (Boerner 20), over 50 million unnecessary antibiotic prescriptions are written each year (Murray 266), and 6.4 million

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    heroin is described as the most addictive and habit forming. The main derivative of heroin is the poppy seed commonly indigenous to Central America. Poppy seed derivatives, like heroin and methadone are categorized as types of opioids. Any drug which is qualified as an opioid must act upon the nervous system in order to relieve pain and supply an euphoric feeling to the user. These drugs are the most commonly prescribed and widely consumed form of medication in regards to chronic pain relief, despite

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    street drug to seize the scene. This new obsession is so incredibly potent and will literally make unsuspecting persons who touch it drop dead. This poses huge hazards for first responders; and has already claimed lives. Carfentanil is a powerful opioid, which was actually engineered to be solely used as an elephant tranquilizer. To give a frame of reference regarding its lineage: carfentanil derived from fentanyl which is a synthetic narcotic analgesic derived from morphine. On a scale of potency

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