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Opioid Epidemic

You are here: Archive / Terms / Topics / Public Health and Public Safety / Opioid Epidemic / Page 2

Medical Notes: May 8, 2022

>> May 8, 2022

Is your medication harming the health of your baby? Then, the number of drugs laced with Fentanyl has skyrocketed. And finally, our vocal habits change depending on who we’re talking to.

topics: Addiction| Children and Youth at Risk| Communication| Drug Overdose| Drug Use and Abuse| Language| Law Enforcement and Police| Medical Research| Medication| News and Headlines| Opioid Epidemic| Pregnancy and Child Birth| Prescription Drugs| Public Health and Public Safety| Research and Clinical Trials| Risk| Vulnerable Populations

How Harm Reduction Services Help Reduce Rates of Drug Overdose

>> April 17, 2022

The CDC reports May 2020 through April 2021 saw the most drug overdose deaths ever recorded in a single year. Experts discuss the use of harm reduction services and why drug addiction is a mental health issue.

topics: Addiction| Children and Youth at Risk| Drug Overdose| Harm Reduction| Mental Health| Opioid Epidemic| Public Health| Public Health and Public Safety| Public Safety| Vulnerable Populations

Easing the Opioid Epidemic: How to Respond

>> December 19, 2021

Drug overdoses killed more than 100,000 Americans in the first year of the Covid-19 pandemic, as pressures built and users sometimes had to get their fix from unfamiliar sources. Experts discuss how the pandemic cost lives beyond Covid, and how surgical painkiller drug substitutions are beginning to keep some people from going down the opioid path.

topics: Addiction| Behavioral Science| Consumerism| Consumerism and Consumer Safety/Protection| Covid-19 Pandemic| Crime and Criminal Justice| Drug Overdose| Drug Use and Abuse| Harm Reduction| Health Care| Medication| Opioid Epidemic| Pharmacology and Toxicology| Prescription Drugs| Public Health| Public Health and Public Safety| Public Policy and Regulation| Public Safety| Recovery| Risk| Social Isolation and Loneliness| Surgery| Vulnerable Populations

Medical Notes: October 3, 2021

>> October 3, 2021

Children as young as five may soon be part of the tug of war over vaccine mandates. Then, several important studies on Covid and vaccination are released by CDC. And finally, a study finds that people with a history of trauma get more of a high from morphine than people who’ve been trauma-free.

topics: Addiction| Behavioral Science| Child Development| Children and Parenting| Covid-19 Pandemic| Covid-19 Vaccine| Family and Interpersonal Relationships| Government and Legislation| Infectious Disease and Vaccination| Medical Research| News and Headlines| Opioid Epidemic| Public Health and Public Safety| Public Policy and Regulation| Research and Clinical Trials| Trauma| Vaccination| Vaccine Mandate| Viruses
The Unmeasurable Presence Of Pain

The Unmeasurable Presence of Pain

>> March 28, 2021

Pain varies from person to person and is totally subjective. It can’t be truly measured. This makes pain management one of the greatest challenges in healthcare. An expert discusses how pain works and how doctors struggle to contain it.

topics: Health Care| Inflammation and Pain| Opioid Epidemic| Pharmacology and Toxicology| Public Health| Public Health and Public Safety| Technology

Medical Notes: Week of February 9, 2020

>> February 9, 2020

The gap between black and white uninsured rates has dropped by more than four percent. Plus, a new study in the Journal of General Internal Medicine shows that only two percent of those who are considered high risk for drug overdose have filled a prescription for Naloxone. Then, Cancer patients often receive radiation therapy over several months, but a new …

topics: Access to Care| Addiction| Affordable Care Act| Behavioral Science| Cancer Treatment and Research| Discrimination and Racism| Drug Overdose| Drug Use and Abuse| Ethnicity| Health Care| Insurance| News and Headlines| Opioid Epidemic| Pharmacology and Toxicology| Prescription Drugs| Public Health and Public Safety| Public Safety| Radiation| Research and Clinical Trials| Technology

Medical Notes: Week of September 15, 2019

>> September 15, 2019

Nodding off very often during the day may be an early warning sign of Alzheimer’s disease. Then, surveys show that about a tenth of Americans over age 18 either use illicit drugs or don’t use their medications the way they’re supposed to. And finally, If you’re really stressed, a nice glass of red wine really could be just the ticket.

topics: Alternative Medicine and Treatments| Anxiety and Depression| Biology| Drug Use and Abuse| Federal and State Government| Federal Government| Gender and Identity| Government and Legislation| Health Care| Memory and Amnesia| Mental Health| Neuroscience and Neurology| News and Headlines| Opioid Epidemic| Pharmacology and Toxicology| Public Health and Public Safety| Sleep| Stress and Stress Management

Medical Notes: Week of July 14, 2019

>> July 14, 2019

A new study finds the people we trust most, friends and family may be at fault for triggering opioid addiction. Then, a new study finds that vitamin D may help cancer patients live longer, and finally, another reason you should think twice before dozing off with the television left on.

topics: Addiction| Behavioral Science| Biology| Children and Youth at Risk| Disease| Drug Use and Abuse| Endocrinology and Metabolism| Family and Interpersonal Relationships| Friendship| Life Expectancy/Lifespan| Medical Research| Mental Health| News and Headlines| Opioid Epidemic| Pharmacology and Toxicology| Prescription Drugs| Public Health and Public Safety| Research and Clinical Trials| Science| Sleep| Technology| Vitamin D| Vulnerable Populations

Medical Notes: Week of November 4, 2018

>> November 4, 2018

Post surgery opioid addiction in women. The Risks of drinking everyday. Intestinal bacteria tied to obesity in toddlers. Lung cancer death decreases in California. And finally, a reduction in the flu for some due to television watching habits.

topics: Addiction| Alcohol Use and Abuse| Behavioral Science| Cancer Treatment and Research| Health Care| Medical Research| News and Headlines| Obesity and Body Weight| Opioid Epidemic| Pharmacology and Toxicology| Prevention| Public Health and Public Safety| Research and Clinical Trials| Smoking| Surgery
Using Naloxone for Drug Overdoses

Using Naloxone for Drug Overdoses

>> September 9, 2018

The drug Naloxone has been hailed as a lifesaver, as it can reverse the effects of what would otherwise be fatal opioid overdoses. Expert panels recommend that more average citizens carry it, especially those likely to be in contact with drug users. However, obstacles including cost prevent even some first responders from having access. A new study also …

topics: Addiction| Behavioral Science| Children and Youth at Risk| Drug Overdose| Drug Use and Abuse| Economics and Finance| Emergency Medicine and First Responders| Health Care| Opioid Epidemic| Pharmacology and Toxicology| Public Health and Public Safety
criminalizing addiction

Addiction, Relapse and Criminalization

>> August 12, 2018

After criminal convictions, many people with substance use disorder are placed on probation with the condition they remain completely drug free. They are often jailed when they relapse, setting back recovery and removing them from treatment that helps keep them clean. Is that fair, when relapse is a common symptom of their disease (and many others)?

topics: Addiction| Behavioral Science| Constitutional Rights| Crime and Criminal Justice| Debate| Drug Use and Abuse| Ethics| Government and Legislation| Jails and Prisons| Law Enforcement and Police| Legal Issues and the Courts| Mass Incarceration| Morality| Neuroscience and Neurology| Opioid Epidemic| Pharmacology and Toxicology| Philosophy and Ethics| Prevention| Psychiatry| Psychology| Psychology and Psychiatry| Public Health and Public Safety| Public Policy and Regulation| Recovery| Substance Abuse| Treatments| War on Drugs
Drug Abuse and Harm Reduction

Harm Reduction and Drug Abuse

>> June 17, 2018

As the opioid crisis continues, the city of Vancouver, BC, has found that a harm reduction approach helps addicts move to safer drug use and eventually getting clean. An author who’s watched the process discusses the controversial approach of officially allowing drug use, but in safer conditions.

topics: Addiction| Behavioral Science| Children and Youth at Risk| Drug Use and Abuse| Harm Reduction| Opioid Epidemic| Pharmacology and Toxicology| Public Health and Public Safety| Substance Abuse| Vulnerable Populations| War on Drugs
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