Showing posts with label drug users. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drug users. Show all posts

Addiction can have a strong grip on your mental health and wellbeing, which is why manufacturers of addictive prescription painkillers work hard to find an alternative medication that won’t get users so hooked. This was the case in August 2010, when makers of the prescription painkiller OxyContin released a abuse-resistant form of the drug that deterred drug addicts from crushing the substance and inhaling or injecting it. According to a letter published this month in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), it worked; OxyContin went from being the primary drug of abuse for 36% of prescription-drug misusers to just 13% about 21 months later. Unfortunately, however, this isn’t the end of the story.


 


Instead of drug users quitting when they stopped getting high on OxyContin, they simply switched drugs. Other opioids moved in to fill the gap left by OxyContin, with drug users choice of high-potency fentanyl and hydromorphone rising from 20% to 32%, the NEJM survey showed. Even though, when drug users were asked about the substances they used to “get high in the past 30 days at least once,” OxyContin fell from 47% of respondents to 30%, the use of heroin nearly doubled. The survey authors quoted one respondent who said, “Most people that I know don’t use OxyContin to get high anymore. They have moved on to heroin [because] it is easier to use, much cheaper and easily available.”


 


For the study, the scientists researched almost 2,600 people who had been involved in treatment programmes throughout the US for prescription opioid addiction between July 2009 and March 2012. When they gathered their data, the authors were forced to conclude, “[A]n abuse-deterrent formulation successfully reduced abuse of a specific drug but also generated an unanticipated outcome: replacement of the abuse-deterrent formulation with alternative opioid medications and heroin, a drug that may pose a much greater overall risk to public health than OxyContin. Thus, abuse-deterrent formulations may not be the ‘magic bullets’ that many hoped they would be in solving the growing problem of opioid abuse.”


 


If you know anything about how addiction affects your wellness, you won’t be too surprised by the findings. There’s something to be said for how reducing the supply of particular drugs can help to prevent some new cases of addiction, but the strategy doesn’t do anything for existing addicts, and just replaces one object of addiction with another, potentially more harmful, one. This is due to the fact that addiction doesn’t lie in the drug itself, but rather in a dysfunctional coping strategy for the widespread human desire to manage emotions. On a more superficial level, it’s like taking cupcakes away from someone who’s trying to lose weight, but has a problem with emotional eating. That person wasn’t addicted to the cupcakes, they were relying on the dysfunctional coping strategy – the emotional eating – and so will simply switch to chocolate or ice-cream.


 


Therefore, doctors who simply cut off addicted patients’ supply of prescription drugs, or pharmaceutical companies who introduce abuse-deterrent formulas, do not address the underlying need that drives the addiction. In fact, it just pushes these people into the market for street drugs, which makes the situation so much worse. They lose contact with the medical system, purchase drugs that are more likely to be adulterated or even poisonous, and don’t know the exact dose they’re getting, which increases overdose risk. Though it may seem counterintuitive, we should be bringing as many opioid addicts as possible into the medical system and using opioids themselves in treatment when necessary, instead of driving them out and into the hands of the illegal heroin market.

While HIV and AIDS are having more of an impact than ever on environmental wellness, the main concern for the diseases still remains for human health and wellbeing. Across the world, AIDS affects the wellness of over 30million people, causing infection, discrimination and death. By the end of 2015, the United Nations hope to achieve certain targets which will help to eliminate this disease from the face of the planet.


 


Target One: To reduce sexual transmission of HIV by 50%.


According to UK research, more and more gay men are getting receptive to the idea of safe sex, and they strongly advocate the use of condoms. This is promising, as is the increasing use of sex education and safe sex awareness programmes in schools, as the majority of HIV-infections occur in young people, sex workers and homosexuals.


 


Target Two: To eliminate vertical transmission of HIV and reduce maternal death by 50%.


To stop mothers passing on HIV to their babies – whether before or after birth – there are more effective antiretroviral medicines being brought out, the practice of caesarean section is being enhanced and HIV-positive women are being educated on the dangers of breastfeeding.


 


Target Three: To completely prevent new HIV infections among drug users.


82 countries have introduced NSPs (Needle and Syringe Programmes), and 70 countries have introduced OST (Opioid Substitution Therapy), to reduce the risk of HIV among drug users.


 


Target Four: To ensure those who can be treated have complete access to antiretroviral therapy (ART).


The World Health Organisation (WHO) is providing countries with ongoing guidance, tools and support to make ART available for all HIV-positive people who can be treated. This therapy includes three drugs which helps to suppress the spread of HIV.


 


Target Five: To cut TB deaths among HIV sufferers by half.


As WHO and its partners work together to advocate joint TB/HIV prevention, policy development and implementation in various countries, the health organisation recommends 12 different TB/HIV collaborative activities, and provides a number of tools and guidelines for their implementation.


 


Target Six: To reduce discrimination.


Discrimination causes sufferers not to seek help, and can lead to depression and even suicide. Therefore, laws are being released in order to promote the policies which ensure the full realisation of human rights and fundamental freedom.