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New medical device aims to combat opioid addictions

New medical device aims to combat opioid addictions Research on a new medical device hopes to help those with opioid addictions. | Jiselle Santos/The Cougar A new medical device with the goal of preventing opioid addiction was announced by a Dallas-based medical technology company, called the Sotiras.  The startup, the Runatek Corporation announced on March 16 the device will allow for patients to maintain set concentrations of prescription pain medication in their bloodstream while managing chronic pain, according to the statement announcing the creation.  The company launched its first Indiegogo campaign one week after releasing the statement with the goal of raising $12,500 to advance prototyping.

Addressing behavioral health crisis through an integrated approach

Suicides decreased during pandemic, defying expectations, while drug overdoses increased

Suicides decreased during pandemic, defying expectations, while drug overdoses increased Print this article Suicides declined in 2020, according to new data from the National Center for Health Statistics. The finding on suicides is something of a surprise, given the considerable concern among many medical professionals that the isolation caused by the coronavirus pandemic would lead to a rise in people killing themselves. The same data, though, also show a large increase in drug and alcohol overdoses. The data, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, show 44,834 suicides in 2020, a drop of 5.6% from 2019, when 47,511 suicides occurred. During the pandemic, medical professionals have been worried about a possible rise in suicides, especially among younger people. Across the country, we re hearing that there are increased numbers of serious suicidal attempts and suicidal deaths, Dr. Susan Duffy, a professor of pediatrics and emergency medicine at Brown

Wareham Police program targets addiction, not addicts

Wareham Police program targets addiction, not addicts “We needed to do something,” she said. But the “Wareham Fighting Against Addiction Drop-In Center,” opened at the Church of the Good Shepherd on High Street a little over three years ago, has been closed due to COVID. Alfonso and Bill Pimental were instrumental in starting the addiction drop-in center and have continued to work on the community’s addiction problem as best they could. Now an ally in their fight against addiction has appeared: the Wareham Police Dept. “Bill and I have been doing things on the back end and then Wareham PD came to us and said we need to do something with the community. So we came up with this program.”

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