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Treatment Abuse, Behavior Modification, Thought Reform => Straight, Inc. and Derivatives => Topic started by: Anonymous on October 12, 2007, 01:18:16 PM

Title: The only abuse is SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Post by: Anonymous on October 12, 2007, 01:18:16 PM
Teen substance abuse: Health effects can go beyond a feeling of being wasted
Published: Monday, October 1, 2007 | 1:09 PM ET
Canadian Press: THE CANADIAN PRESS


For Wade Cory, it started with a glass of vodka, swiped from a bottle hidden away in his best friend's kitchen.

"I started drinking when I was in Grade 6 or 7," says Cory, now 21 and a counsellor at the Alberta Adolescent Recovery Centre in Calgary. "It was pretty social at the beginning and then around Grade 9, I found marijuana. That was my favourite drug of all time, and started using that. It started out just on weekends and at parties."

Wade Cory, 21, a counselor at the Alberta Adolescent Recovery Centre in Calgary, is a recovered substance abuser who uses his experiences to help others trying to get over their addictions. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh High school life was good. His marks were fine and he was captain of the football team.

But then his grades started to slip, he failed Grade 10 Science and everything started to revolve around his "obsession" with drugs and alcohol.

"Ever since Grade 10 when I really started using weed, and then I went on to (magic) mushrooms and stuff like that, and dextrin, like prescription pills - it was just I thought about that more than anything else I'd ever thought about. I really loved sports, I really loved school, I loved friends, but all that became secondary to marijuana and drinking."

Cory's story is a familiar one to doctors who work with teen users and abusers.

Continue Article

Dr. Karen Leslie, a staff pediatrician at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, said the top two problematic drugs for this demographic are alcohol and cannabis.

"Particularly kids who are using marijuana on a regular basis because that really seems to interfere a lot with their schooling, with all kinds of things in their life," she said.

"We see lots and lots of kids with sleep problems, and then they end up using cannabis to try to get to sleep, and then it becomes something that they're dependent on."

People who are dependent might be using several times a day, she noted.

"And that definitely affects both things like reaction time, if they're driving; it can affect motivation. We know there's a link between psychosis and cannabis. There are lung concerns in terms of respiratory effect. So certainly, cannabis use is quite concerning."

The federal government has expressed concerns, too. It plans to announce an anti-drug strategy this week that is expected to combine treatment and prevention programs with stiffer penalties for illicit drug use.

Dr. Mark Norris, a pediatrician and adolescent health consultant at the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario, said he often sees substance abusers who engage in higher-risk activities.

"One patient I'm thinking of in particular was under the influence of both alcohol and cannabis and dove into a shallow pond and ended up sustaining soft tissue injuries," he said from Ottawa.

"The potential there is quite significant . . . she could have sustained a much more serious injury. And I've personally over the last year seen lots of different instances where people show up with different types of injuries, whether it's falling out of trees, people that are riding motor vehicles or ATVs that have accidents, etc. So the range is quite wide."

In Cory's case, he stole his parents' vehicle on a school day and went joy riding with friends. He got a speeding ticket, a suspension from school and was in and out of treatment programs for the next while.

"I was fully in chaos in my life and I never thought that drugs and alcohol was the problem," he said. "I always thought something else was the problem: my parents were too controlling or the teacher was wrong."

A "six-day bender" that involved prescription pills, booze and marijuana brought everything to a head. He broke into his parents' house, nabbing items that he pawned off for money.

But on his next trip home, his parents weren't there, he had nowhere to go, no friends left, no drugs, no money, no job, he said.

"I came home and there were bars on the window, keeping me out."

Later, his mother managed to get him to a hospital.

"Emergency said I shouldn't be alive just because of how many drugs I had in my system," he said. "They put me in the psych ward and that's where I stayed for a week."

"That's where it came to me: 'What am I doing with my life?"'

Now that he's had his "moment of clarity" and intensive treatment at the centre where he now works as a counsellor, he said parents need to realize that drug addicts and alcoholics "can lie pretty good."

"I fought my parents tooth and nail that it wasn't alcohol and drugs, and it was everything else. I lied to them. I would do anything to keep my drugs and alcohol around me, even if it was ruining my life."

Besides alcohol and marijuana, Leslie said she's concerned about the amount of cocaine use she's been seeing.

"Cocaine is a really, really powerful drug and certainly the young people I've seen who have been using cocaine on a regular basis have really needed very intensive treatment," she said. "When they stop using it, or if they just use it on a weekend, then they get this kind of post-use depression, similar to what you see in kids who use ecstasy."

She said there's a risk of serious medical problems: "Heart complications, high blood pressure complications, there are potential brain complications from having high blood pressure, abnormal heart rhythms from using cocaine."

There are various signs of substance abuse that parents can watch for, experts agree.

Leslie said changes in behaviour and school performance - truancy, a drop in marks or changes in hygiene - could signal a problem.

"Weight loss is a big one in kids who start using a lot of cocaine because it's a stimulant and it's an appetite suppressant, so we've certainly seen kids who've lost large, large amounts of weight as a result of using cannabis and methamphetamine and the other stimulant drugs," she added.

Norris said other effects of substance abuse can include changes in mood, depression, anxiety and a risk of self-harm. In addition, a proportion of his patients engage in fairly high-risk sexual behaviour while under the influence, he said.

"I have absolutely had patients that have presented with sexually transmitted infections (after) having sexual relations under the influence . . . of one or more drugs."

Leslie also noted that ecstasy tablets often look appealing to teens - for instance, they might be stamped with a cartoon character.

But she warned "there is no quality control with any of these," and an analysis of tablets several years ago in London found a huge proportion of what was in the tablets was not MDMA (methylenedioxymethamphetamine).

"A lot of it is word of mouth. 'I've used this one, it was OK' or 'My friend used this tablet, this pink one, so I think it's OK.' That's the bar they're using to assess quality . . . you never know what's in it."

Cory, meanwhile, has finished school, plays hockey with his co-workers at the recovery centre, goes on vacations with other "sober" friends and hasn't had a drink or taken drugs in four years.

"I know there's a solution out there, and I think a lot of people have no idea, absolutely no idea what's going on in a kid's mind when he's a drug addict," he said.

"It's pretty much unbelievable how much my life has done a 180, and just totally went the other way, I think, around family. What it's made me be able to do is just be a normal person in society, no better or less than anybody else, but I can be part of the society now."
Title: The only abuse is SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Post by: Anonymous on October 12, 2007, 01:37:12 PM
It never ceases to amaze me that addicts go on to become addiction counsellors. Where are the addicts who go onto have NOTHING to do with AARC... find OTHER friends other than former AARC people and are employed doing something else.
Title: The only abuse is SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Post by: Anonymous on October 12, 2007, 04:17:29 PM
????  Right, so it would be much more credible getting preached to by someone who has absolutely NO IDEA what you're going through.  

That would be like a virgin giving sex advice.

These councellors become passionate about helping others get the same help they have received.  Pull your head out of your asses.  

And yes, this is a contrant repeat of old accusations, obviously never brought further than this sad little link.
Title: The only abuse is SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Post by: ajax13 on October 12, 2007, 04:36:55 PM
The Wizard is under pressure and is pulling out all the stops in a fresh PR campaign.  Paint that turd Wizard!
Title: Re: The only abuse is SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Post by: ajax13 on October 13, 2007, 06:20:08 PM
Quote from: Guest
Teen substance abuse: Health effects can go beyond a feeling of being wasted
Published: Monday, October 1, 2007 | 1:09 PM ET
Canadian Press: THE CANADIAN PRESS



"Weight loss is a big one in kids who start using a lot of cocaine because it's a stimulant and it's an appetite suppressant, so we've certainly seen kids who've lost large, large amounts of weight as a result of using cannabis and methamphetamine and the other stimulant drugs," she added.

Many questions about this article.  Who wrote it, and what's their link to the Wizard.  How did it happen to come out just as three AARC miracles are up on murder beefs?  And when did cannabis become a stimulant?  
Welcome to the War on Drugs Canada.
It dawned on me the other night that the Wizard really has stolen everything from Miller Newton.  Including the concept of Kids as a national program.  The Wizard is champing at the bit to set up AARC in other provinces, and a cadre of AARColytes are down in Lethbridge trying to get ejoocated.  Alberta let them run unlicensed and completely devoid of qualifications, but other provinces won't.  Run Wizard!  Run!
Title: Re: The only abuse is SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Post by: Anonymous on October 14, 2007, 05:23:40 AM
Quote from: "ajax13"
Quote from: ""Guest""
Teen substance abuse: Health effects can go beyond a feeling of being wasted
Published: Monday, October 1, 2007 | 1:09 PM ET
Canadian Press: THE CANADIAN PRESS



"Weight loss is a big one in kids who start using a lot of cocaine because it's a stimulant and it's an appetite suppressant, so we've certainly seen kids who've lost large, large amounts of weight as a result of using cannabis and methamphetamine and the other stimulant drugs," she added.

Many questions about this article.  Who wrote it, and what's their link to the Wizard.  How did it happen to come out just as three AARC miracles are up on murder beefs?  And when did cannabis become a stimulant?  
Welcome to the War on Drugs Canada.
It dawned on me the other night that the Wizard really has stolen everything from Miller Newton.  Including the concept of Kids as a national program.  The Wizard is champing at the bit to set up AARC in other provinces, and a cadre of AARColytes are down in Lethbridge trying to get ejoocated.  Alberta let them run unlicensed and completely devoid of qualifications, but other provinces won't.  Run Wizard!  Run!



The writer is:
Anne-Marie Tobin Health-Lifestyles Editor, THE CANADIAN PRESS
Published Monday October 1st, 2007 .


Maybe some of the victims need to directly get in touch with her.
Title: The only abuse is SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Post by: Anonymous on October 14, 2007, 12:36:38 PM
Quote
???? Right, so it would be much more credible getting preached to by someone who has absolutely NO IDEA what you're going through.

That would be like a virgin giving sex advice.

These councellors become passionate about helping others get the same help they have received. Pull your head out of your asses.

And yes, this is a contrant repeat of old accusations, obviously never brought further than this sad little link.


I didn't say having addicts who have their addiction under control is a bad idea to work with other addicts.

My point is that's ALL they seem to do. It's getting to be an old repeat story:

"Hi my name is __________, I starting drinking and using drugs when I was 12 years old, AARC saved my life. _____________ a 19 - 22 year old recovered addict and counsellor at AARC."

Where's all the people who graduated and don't hang around AARC anymore and do something OTHER than work for AARC or attending university for addictions counselling. Seems they've only shifted their addiciton from the drug to addiction counselling and AARC.

I've only talked to ONE parent who's child graduated AARC, was clean and sober and WASN'T currently involved with AARC. Although that last point is hazy because they still keep in telephone contact with Vause.
Title: School of hard Knocks
Post by: SpecialLadyFriend on October 14, 2007, 01:17:41 PM
I know that if I were a diagnosed with a disease (like schizophrenia or bipolar disorder) I would personally prefer if my Doctor had a history in medicine, extensive training and schooling, rather than simply sharing my disorder.
When I had surgery last year I was very happy to learn that the Doctor performing the operation had a degree and spent several years in university studying medicine, rather than a mail in degree through the Union Institute.
Title: The only abuse is SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Post by: Anonymous on October 14, 2007, 02:04:23 PM
Quote from: ""Guest""
Quote
???? Right, so it would be much more credible getting preached to by someone who has absolutely NO IDEA what you're going through.

That would be like a virgin giving sex advice.

These councellors become passionate about helping others get the same help they have received. Pull your head out of your asses.

And yes, this is a contrant repeat of old accusations, obviously never brought further than this sad little link.

I didn't say having addicts who have their addiction under control is a bad idea to work with other addicts.

My point is that's ALL they seem to do. It's getting to be an old repeat story:

"Hi my name is __________, I starting drinking and using drugs when I was 12 years old, AARC saved my life. _____________ a 19 - 22 year old recovered addict and counsellor at AARC."

Where's all the people who graduated and don't hang around AARC anymore and do something OTHER than work for AARC or attending university for addictions counselling. Seems they've only shifted their addiciton from the drug to addiction counselling and AARC.

I've only talked to ONE parent who's child graduated AARC, was clean and sober and WASN'T currently involved with AARC. Although that last point is hazy because they still keep in telephone contact with Vause.


You must be joking. 95% of AARC graduates are studying and working in fields completely unrelated to AARC or addictions.
Title: The only abuse is SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Post by: ajax13 on October 14, 2007, 04:06:09 PM
Quote from: ""Guest"

You must be joking. 95% of AARC graduates are studying and working in fields completely unrelated to AARC or addictions.



I thought only 85% were "sober".  At least 5% are dead or imprisoned.
Title: The only abuse is SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Post by: Anonymous on October 20, 2007, 06:11:38 PM
85% are sober when they return to school or work.

Which is pretty hard NOT to do when you are escorted all day and locked in recovery homes all night.

At least you're healthy enough to look after 4 newcomer addicts before you're healthy enough to return to school.

I wonder what the other 15% of NONsober oldcomers are doing before going back to work or school?