remember about the book is his comment that he took so many opioids that his colon burst. so maybe he just doesn't have much of a check reflex. like you seem to just talk to somebody. again like 100 percent that person put it all down and page and that went out. there are quite a few things in there even more than his romantic rival was that he wants taken back. >> greg: you hit on it the head. i have to read a book if somebody's colon explodes. because i need to know how that happens just in case. i want to see the warning signs before my colon explodes. because i don't know what it's like. it could just happen now if i get too angry. maybe -- >> more than 60 vicodin or fentanyl a day. >> greg: yes, according -- i'm not quite there yet. jimmy the show was called friends. some friends right? this guy was near death every day and they just all showed up for work. no inventions on their part. >> jimmy: that's the part i love
This WebMD slideshow features pictures of commonly abused prescription and over-the-counter drugs, including depressants, pain relievers, and stimulants.
The Walgreens pharmacy chain can be held responsible for much of the opioid epidemic in San Francisco because it supplied the drugs, a federal judge ruled.
the pain. so i kind of liked it and itsp just kind of spiraled out of control from there. so i found the most minor injury in the injuries kind of m provoked me into asking fore pills and that happened more and more . i sprained my ankle. i you know, i still play, but i need some pills and it just got worse and worse. >> and as you -- you know, you take so many for so long, then those are not goodod enouge you have t to add one or two more . and so so at my worst i was w taking sixteen vicodin. yes. a just a handful at one time and we talked about it some last night. i knew it was a problem. you know, i knew it was a problem way before that . but you know, it was to a point where i would throw up, i would have a gag reflex. nt
>> it can be disguised as another drug. >> it is poisoning, not overdose and the deception that's happening. >> apps like snapchat have faced heavy criticism by parents who say they are an open market for the sale and purchase of drugs. >> young people are on social media. it is often anonymous and it is accessible and easy. >> in 2021 the drug enforcement agency seized more than 20 million counterfeit pills. >> the criminal drug cartels in mexico are making pills to look exactly like an oxy, a percocet, vicodin, xanax, two milligrams of fentanyl is enough to kill someone. 10 or 20 tiny crystals of salt. >> we've got to talk about what our kids are being exposed to. >> what is in our warning and sharing our story we can save some of these other kids and we