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Showing posts with label Drug overdose. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Drug overdose. Show all posts

Thursday, August 30, 2012

Drug overdose not the cause of Sage Stallone's death

66ème Festival du Cinéma de Venise (Mostra), 1...66ème Festival du Cinéma de Venise (Mostra), 11ème jour (12/09/2009) Tapis rouge pour la soirée de cloture du Festival de Venise 2009 Sylvester Stallone (Photo credit: Wikipedia)Sage Stallone,36 , son of actor Sylvester Stallone was found dead in his home by an employee in July of this year. There was much speculation as to the cause of his untimely death, including some assertions that painkillers were the cause of the death. However, LA Coroner officials have stated that the cause of death was natural, and that there were only minute traces of hydrocodone in his system.
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Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Dr. Drew Pinsky from Celebrity Rehab tweets: Jeff Conaway didn't overdose

Dr. Drew (David Pinsky) holding a producer cre...Image via Wikipedia

Contrary to all reports, Grease star Jeff Conaway didn't overdose. Celebrity Rehab doctor  Drew Pinsky states that after visiting with Grease star Jeff Conaway recently at a Los Angeles hospital , the actor did not overdose as previously reported. While on twitter,  Dr. Pinsky tweeted ""Just visited Jeff Conaway," He is stable & looks like he will recover from his pneumonia. Not an OD like press is alleging & certainly not dead."
After a manager said the former star of "Taxi" and "Grease" was found unconscious on May 11 after possibly taking too many pain pills, Dr. Drew Pinsky came to the actor's defense over the weekend to set the record straight.

Read more: Jeff Conaway did not overdose, is 'tenuous' in coma as he battles pneumonia, says Dr. Drew Pinsky

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Sunday, May 15, 2011

Chris Farley, a talent lost to addiction


Chris Farley was best known as the loveable and large funny man on Saturday Night Live. However, many were unaware of the addictions that he struggled with and many tabloids focused a great deal of attention on the funnyman's weight instead of the most dire problems he had with addiction.

Sadly, Chris Farley succumbed to his addictions and was found dead in his Chicago apartment on December 18, 1997. An autopsy revealed that Farley had died of an accidental overdose of cocaine and heroin . For those wondering how big of a dose of cocaine or heroin does it take to cause death, the answer is simple, the next dose you take.

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Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Has Heroin caused more deaths than auto accidents?

Heroin powderImage via Wikipedia
Well that depends on how this question was intended, if  you mean do more people die from automobile accidents than Heroin, the answer is probably yes.
Black tar heroinImage via Wikipedia However, to put this into proper perspective first consider this, a greater majority of the population drive cars, so the odds of there being more deaths due to automobile accidents would naturally be higher especially if you take into account also that it is rare that there are ever just one vehicle involved in vehicular accidents resulting in death. However, if there were the same number of Heroin users as there are car drivers, those numbers would probably sky rocket. That doesn't even factor in how many vehicular accidents that may have occured from someone being high on Heroin.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Heroin Statistics

Heroin aufkochenImage via Wikipedia
The negative impact of pure Heroin alone can cause a multitude of problems for anyone addicted, however, in its street form, it can have many more impurities mixed into the drug that do not dissolve into the blood stream. These impurities can cause blockages in the circulatory system that can cause many internal organs to shut down.
A Heroin user pays anywhere from $150.00 and up daily to support their addiction.

51 percent of all accidents reported in hospital emergency rooms as far back as 1999 was attributed to Heroin and Morphine abuse, it has increased significantly since then.
 
3.8 million people (1.5 percent of the population above 12) say they have tried heroin at least once in their lifetimes.

560,000 people used heroin last year. Current estimates suggest that nearly 600,000 people need treatment for heroin addiction.

338,000 people used heroin last month.

The rate of heroin lifetime heroin use is higher among those in prison (23.4 percent for State and 17.9 percent for Federal).

 In the 25 to 49 age group, illicit drug overdose is the fourth leading cause of death, about the same number as motor vehicle crashes.
Children as young as 13 have been found involved in heroin abuse. According to statistics in 1999 heroin overdose has caused more deaths than traffic accidents.
The 1999 National Household Survey on drug abuse (NHSDA) estimated that there were 149,000 new heroin users in 1998 and that nearly 80 percent were under the age of 26.
Of approximately 1.2 million "sometime" heroin users in the US, about 208,000 use it habitually.
 Last year, there were approximately 84,000 visits to emergency rooms in the US due to heroin.
 Over 80% of heroin users inject with a partner, yet 80% of overdose victims found by paramedics are alone.
 The dependent person use between 150 - 250 milligrams per day. Divide into 3 doses.
 The heroin addict spends between $150 to $200 per day to maintain a heroin addiction.
In 1998. 65% of the heroin seized in the United States originated in South America, and 17% came from Mexico.
Slang terms for heroin include: smack, mud, dope, horse, junk, brown sugar, big H, and black tar.
Street names associated with heroin include "smack," "H," "skag," and "junk." Other names may refer to types of heroin produced in a specific geographical area, such as "Mexican black tar."
Good news about teens and heroin substance abuse
Amongst young adults and college students, heroin use is not seeing the decline it has in teenagers. Perhaps this older age group feels the risks are acceptable. A slight increase in heroin users in college students is seen - from 0.1 percent to 0.2 percent. Additionally, in young adults, those reporting that they have used heroin at least once in their lifetimes has increased from 1.7 percent in 2005 to 1.9 percent. It is a small increase, and one that shows that heroin substance abuse among young adults is stable, and perhaps growing slightly.
First time heroin users
According to NSDUH information, in the last year about 91,000 persons over the age of 12 used heroin for the first time. Amongst recent first time heroin users, aged 12 to 49, the average age was 20.7. This indicates that many heroin users wait until they leave their teenagers years to begin using the drug.


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