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Injectable medication shows promise for Anchorage's homeless alcoholics


Injectable medication shows promise for Anchorage’s homeless alcoholics
Published March 4
Lucy Tall and Roger Williams were happy to share that they have been "sober for 14 months" on Wednesday, March 3, 2021. The couple spent ten years together living in homeless camps and shelters before getting placed in permanent supportive housing at the Karluk Manor last summer. (Bill Roth / ADN)
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This story was produced in a collaboration between Alaska Public Media and the Anchorage Daily News, with support from the journalism nonprofit the
.
Lucy Tall and Roger Williams spent years living on the streets of Anchorage, camping in parks and bathing in creeks. Last year, both were suffering from health problems related to alcoholism and coronavirus was spreading.

Anchorage , Alaska , United-states , Chevak , North-slope , Fairbanks , Kenai , Ketchikan , Wasilla , Ship-creek , Americans , Kuskokwim-delta

'Body Brokers' Review: Drug Abuse Is Big Business for More Than Just the Dealers


'Body Brokers' Review: Drug Abuse Is Big Business for More Than Just the Dealers
'Body Brokers' Review: Drug Abuse Is Big Business for More Than Just the Dealers
Director John Swab survived drug addiction to share this shocking exposé of how opportunists are exploiting a loophole in recovery programs.
Peter Debruge, provided by
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Running time: Running time: 113 MIN.
Courtesy of Vertical Entertainment
Of all the dramas made about substance abuse, “Body Brokers” is the first I can recall about the “treatment industry” itself, that multibillion-dollar sector dedicated to helping hard-drug users kick the habit, and its conclusion is startling: Addiction is a veritable money machine for doctors, therapists and pharmaceutical companies alike, a substantial number of whom thrive not on recovery but on repeat business. The shadier among them rely on low-level recruiters, or “body brokers,” to keep the system supplied with souls in need of saving — or else just some easy cash.

San-diego , California , United-states , Ohio , Utah , Michaelk-williams , Viviana-zarragoitia , Jessica-rothe , Christopher-keating , Robert-ogden-barnum , Kathrynm-moseley , Thomas-dekker

5 Best Diet Pills for Women to Lose Weight Fast


5 Best Diet Pills for Women to Lose Weight Fast
Check Out Our List of the Best Weight Loss Pills For Women To Lose Weight Fast
Norcal Marketing
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Studies show that women often find it more difficult than men to lose weight. That’s why there’s a wide selection of diet pills on the market that are designed specifically for the female body. In addition to helping you burn fat, the best weight loss pills offer additional health benefits, such as appetite suppression, improved energy levels, and a faster metabolism.
However, not all diet pills for women are created equal. Although some products deliver great results, many of the best-selling weight loss pills don’t have the right combination of ingredients to be effective, or they aren’t dosed at the correct amount.

United-states , Indonesia , United-kingdom , Indonesian , Drug-administration , Baylor-college-of-medicine , Diet-pills , Best-weight-loss-pills , Best-supplement , Losing-over , Lowest-price

A Small But Certain Step Toward Removing the "X" Waiver


A Small but Certain Step Toward Removing the “X” Waiver
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On January 14, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services issued new, relaxed guidelines for physicians wishing to prescribe buprenorphine to their patients with opioid use disorder. While the so‐​called “X” waiver required of prescribers remains, the new guidelines permit physicians (not nurse practitioners or physician assistants) to prescribe buprenorphine without the waiver. They may only prescribe to patients located within their own state and they may have no more than 30 opioid use disorder patients on buprenorphine at any time.
Buprenorphine is a synthetic opioid that was developed to treat pain. It is only a partial opioid agonist, and therefore is less prone to suppress the respiratory mechanism in high doses. Since the early part of this century, it has been used for Medication Assisted Treatment (MAT) for opioid use disorder. Practitioners have been allowed to prescribe and dispense buprenorphine to their patients and follow them as outpatients in their office. Unfortunately, onerous federal regulations apply.

France , Canada , Brett-giroir , Nora-volkow , National-institute-on-drug-abuse , Mental-health-services-administration , Us-department-of-health , Human-services , Drug-enforcement-administration , National-academy-of-science , Medication-assisted-treatment , Drug-addiction-treatment-act

NIDA-Funded Study Evaluating Extended-Release Injectable Naltrexone Plus Bupropion for the Treatment of Methamphetamine Use Disorder Published in New England Journal of Medicine


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DUBLIN, Jan. 14, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- Results from a National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)-funded study evaluating the efficacy and safety of naltrexone for extended-release injectable suspension (XR-NTX) administered once every three weeks plus oral extended-release bupropion administered daily as a combination treatment for adults with moderate or severe methamphetamine use disorder (MUD) were published today by Dr. Madhukar H. Trivedi et al. in the
New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM).
1 This is the second published study evaluating this combination regimen for the treatment of MUD.
2
The number of adults living with MUD has risen in recent years. In 2019, approximately 1 million adults in the U.S. reported having a methamphetamine use disorder-an increase of more than 50 percent since 2016.

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