Hello Carl Hart lol
I used to hear the statistic 4% when I first started taking pain medication pre opioid war recently I saw the stat 8-12% in line with the new fear mongering for opioids.If you check pain management advocacy groups it's actually 99%.
But they have their agenda. If you check the DEA it's probably like 75% of people become IV fent users after their 1st tramadol pill.
I don't know what the real truth is.
So true..... the wrong people punished
God that was sad. I feel like that’s me, I was able to ride horses and kept my house clean and was working and now I struggle to work out and I am miserable. I feel like I have aged 5yrs in the past year.So true.
See my post (#42) in the thread "does anyone think opiates have other benefits besides pain relief?"
It's a tragic story.
Get out of this shithole right-wing Christian drug war mongering country and move to central or south America and buy opioids at the pharmacy.God that was sad. I feel like that’s me, I was able to ride horses and kept my house clean and was working and now I struggle to work out and I am miserable. I feel like I have aged 5yrs in the past year.
“I would prefer finding the underlying issue causing pain in the 1st place” was one snarky comment on that thread of comments
some shit isn’t fixable asshole
I have injuries to my neck and back, arthritis, spinal stenosis and trigmeinal neuralgia
I know what the underlying issues are they are not fixable
the lack of sympathy in that thread was difficult to read it made my blood boil
I hate that type of ignorance
I swear I would be careful flinging around opinions like that because karmas a bitch and you never know one car accident one fall and you can have chronic pain that no one can help you with except suboxone they are throwing that shit around like confetti
Yes whether or not a person gets addicted to a substance has everything to do with how well that person responds to a particular substance, and that's down to personality and individual brain chemistry. For instance I love opiates but don't react well AT ALL to stimulants - yet for others stimulants are the greatest shit ever and they can't get get anything out of opiates.Yeah well the first time I tried morphine (when I was in high school) I was in a sense instantly addicted, at least on a psychological level. The night I first tried it I was quite distressed, and took a mere 15mg, sat down on the couch to watch TV and gradually felt the warmth and relief wash over me. All my concerns melted away. That night I slept like an infant, and when I woke up the next morning there was a sparkle to the day, light took on this different, softer quality, the sun was shining, the sky was blue. I felt restored, renewed, like a 3 year old waking up from a nap. I was instantly addicted. I thought where has this been all of my life?
Got some stats for ya:If you check pain management advocacy groups it's actually 99%.
But they have their agenda. If you check the DEA it's probably like 75% of people become IV fent users after their 1st tramadol pill.
I don't know what the real truth is.
I'm going to disagree with the statement that street heroin is weaker than morphine.Got some stats for ya:
In 2015, 97.5 million Americans were taking prescription opioids, of which around 2 million fit the criteria for addiction. (SAMSHA)
At the same time there were 828,000 heroin users, of which 591,000 fit the criteria. (NSDUH)
Given the fact that prescription opioids bind to the exact same receptors as heroin, and that street heroin is often cut so much its actual effect is weaker compared to pharmaceutical grade morphine, why are a whopping 71% of heroin users addicted while only a grand total of 2% of medical patients on prescriptions are?
... The answer is that addiction ISN'T ABOUT THE PHARMACOLOGY OF ANY GIVEN DRUG, IT'S ABOUT THE MOTIVATIONS OF THE USER.
Here's to underline that :
In 1972 a total of 29 kg of heroin was legally prescribed in Britain. "There is a virtual absence of addicts generated by this singular medical practice." (Trebach 1982)
You get cold before you fall asleep" THIS SOUnds LIKE A FAKE POST TO ME, WD is HELL not you got cold.hello, as I wrote in my other thread I used heroin for extreme pain relief purposes, I took it only by snorting and I never injected. I took overall like a dozen grams through a 2 months period by snorting few mg almost everyday, then I stopped 2 months ago.
The first days after stopping I missed it probably mostly because it eased my pain and I felt like cold before falling asleep, yeah that wasn't nice. If I still had more I'd have taken it of course but it wasn't so tragic and I managed to cut it.
I'll take it again probably because I still have pain and I'm very stressed and it calms my nervous system down like weed doesn't, but yeah that's my experience so far, it's not that if you try few grams you get addicted and can't do without
Was it already mostly fent back in 2015 -?I'm going to disagree with the statement that street heroin is weaker than morphine.
But it's semantics because street "heroin" is fentanyl so it is far stronger than morphine including cut.
Now quality afghan real heroin which is almost pure which isn't at the street level normally is going to be more powerful than morphine.
The pharma heroin in Britain....wasn't it used for addicts? So how can we say it didn't cause addiction when it was administered to addicts. I think they use H for chronic pain in Britain too, so there the statement makes sens.
Over here in UK street heroin is mostly still heroinb at least in my little corner. And also often cut to fuck. (Though fent has been creeping in for the past few years.) And like I've bought H here that was so weak I had to do ridiculous amounts to get any effect, while 30 mg of pure morphine in a legit hospital situation knocked my socks off & had me high as a kite for hours on end.I'm going to disagree with the statement that street heroin is weaker than morphine.
But it's semantics because street "heroin" is fentanyl so it is far stronger than morphine including cut.
The quote I gave doesn't refer to the practice of maintaining established addicts on diamorphine instead of methadone (known as 'the British system'). It refers to the practice of prescribing it to chronic pain patients in the same way that morphine is still prescribed today, which was also done at the time. Those patients were looking for nothing from the drug except the relief of their physical pain, and only a tiny percentage of them subsequently started to seek out more of it for non - medical reasons.The pharma heroin in Britain....wasn't it used for addicts? So how can we say it didn't cause addiction when it was administered to addicts. I think they use H for chronic pain in Britain too, so there the statement makes sens.
No shit that's why I asked you to clarify England's heroin program whether it was for addicts or chronic pain patients.(Think logically. You wouldn't speak of addicts being or not being CREATED when discussing individuals who were already known as addicts.)