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DUFFY'S CULTURAL COUTURE
Sunday, 28 June 2015
Project Save
Topic: COMMUNITY INTEREST

 

 

 

GLOUCESTER TOWNSHIP POLICE PROJECT SAVE (SUBSTANCE ABUSE VICTIMIZATION EFFORT): A COMMUNITY RESPONSE TO ADDICTION

 

 

The illicit use of prescription drugs has created an epidemic throughout the United States and even more significantly in the Philadelphia Metropolitan area of the Mid-Atlantic Region.  The Gloucester Township Police Department understands that heroin addiction is no longer a problem facing cities and is now in the backyard of suburban communities like Gloucester Township, NJ.

 

The consequences of this epidemic are many.  Crime, family dysfunction, and physical/emotional abuse, are just a few of the many tragic results of the disease of addiction.    It is well known that such drug addiction and abuse cause crime.  Desperation leads many to commit acts that perhaps they would have not engaged in if it were not for the power of illicit substances.

 

The New Jersey Governor’s Council on Alcoholism and Drug Abuse 2014 Report entitled Confronting New Jersey’s Drug Problem, herein referred to as the “2014 GCADA Report” found that drug overdose death is now the leading cause of accidental death in the United States.  The revelation that the new leading cause of accidental death are drug overdoses demands a comprehensive nationwide response similar to what has been enacted to combat motor vehicle accidents and other health crisis such as AIDS.

 

A number of the actions listed in this plan were created as a result of GT PIER (Gloucester Township Prevention Information Roundtable) which was implemented in 2011 in response to the growing concern of prescription abuse.  Additionally, previously implemented measures as well as new initiatives described support the recommended action steps as detailed in the 2014 GCADA Report.

 

The measures in this action plan focus police efforts and practices in the three critical areas of law enforcement SUPPRESSIONPREVENTION, and INTERVENTION in an effort to effectively combat this epidemic both now and in the future.

 


Posted by tammyduffy at 7:17 AM EDT
Saturday, 27 June 2015
THE HIGH PRICE OF FRESH VEGETABLES
Topic: COMMUNITY INTEREST


 

 
 
 THE HIGH PRICE OF FRESH VEGETABLES
 
 

 

By Tammy Duffy

 

 

Price/lb  
*Quality Rating 1-5, 5 being the best

 

 

 

 

Compared to Mercer County and New Jersey, Trenton residents have more problems with their weight, with 39 percent of residents being obese. There are only three true supermarkets in the city and an incredibly high number of limited food service restaurants, 51% of outlets and bodegas  29 percent%.  Trenton is a food desert that would have to triple its number of supermarkets to adequately serve its residents.

 

Let's review some health statistics for the City of Trenton...

 

  • Nearly half of Trenton’s elementary, middle and high schools are located in parts of the city with the highest density of bodegas (convenience stores). 

  • Many Trenton residents lead sedentary lifestyles, with only 34 percent of children meeting recommended exercise guidelines and Hispanic children being least active.

  • Most Trenton parents believe their children get enough physical activity when in reality, they do not.

  • One in two Trenton children is overweight and obese in every age category.

  • The largest difference between Trenton public school children and those nationally occurs among the youngest children, with 49 percent of three to five-year-olds in Trenton being overweight or obese compared to 21 percent in the U.S.

  • Despite the city’s obesity problem, food insecurity affects about one in five Trenton households.

 

Source: http://www.trentonhealthteam.org/tht/TrentonCommunityHealthNeedsAssessmentJuly2013.pdf

 

 

Healthy diets rich in fruits and vegetables may reduce the risk of cancer and other chronic diseases. Fruits and vegetables also provide essential vitamins and minerals, fiber, and other substances that are important for good health. Most fruits and vegetables are naturally low in fat and calories and are filling.

 

A few weeks ago the City of Trenton welcomed the opening of the new Greenwood Ave. Farmers Market.  This is supposed to give local residents healthier choices and easier access to fresh food. There is no doubt it gives them both of these attributes (fresh food and easy access), but it comes at a high price.  (the market is located near the train station, near the senior housing complex on Greenwood Avenue.  The Farmers Market will be open every Monday from 230 p.m. until 6:30 p.m. through the end of October.)

  

We visited the Greenwood Ave Market this past week and we spent $10.50. For this amount of money we got, one very small zucchini (5 inches in length and thin), 2 small tomatoes, 4 ears of corn, 2 peppers, 1 cucumber and a flower of broccoli. As we paid for our purchases we said, "These prices were so much higher than the grocery stores. "

 

We left the market feeling like we were just robbed. We decided to do an analysis. We graded the quality of the Greenwood Ave Market vegetables, but we did not gather all the pricing at the time of our visit. The idea to do this came later in the week. The analysis will demonstrate a significant difference in pricing that no doubt is demonstrated in the vegetables that we did acquire the pricing of at the Greenwood market.  

 

This morning, we ventured to local grocery stores (Shoprite on Rt1, Wegman's on Rt. 1 and Risoldi's on Quakerbridge Rd) and wrote down the pricing for like vegetables and fruits.  The chart below demonstrates the comparison of pricing and quality of the vegetables we saw.  We have separated each vegetable store by color. The items in red demonstrate a significant price different at the Greenwood Ave Farmer's market compared to local stores.

 

As a marathon runner and triathlete, I do consider myself qualified to judge the quality of produce. I each a ton of it to fuel my body to success. The four ears of corn I bought at the Greenwood Market (you could not peel it back like you can in the grocery store) were all rotten. They had bugs in them and I could only eat half of 3 of them. This is not good, especially when the corn cost $0.60/an ear.

 

If the goal of the Greenwood Ave Farmer's market is to bring access of fresh vegetables to the local community, why are the residents having to significantly higher prices?  The argument may be that the vegetables at the Greenwood Ave venue are fresh picked. Are there time stamps on the vegetables proving that?  

 

 

There are other wonderful attributes to the local Greenwood Market. Locals can also get much-needed exercise classes, nutrition lessons, and health screenings.  The local bodegas do not have the fresh vegetables for the residents.

 

Trenton residents should not be price gouged for their vegetables. They are victims here. They do not have the resources to go to other stores to compare prices so they are stuck paying these high prices at the new market. One can only hope that there will be a re-evaluation of the price points for the Trenton residents. There are organizations and corporations that are financially supporting this effort. I hope this article is helpful for them to persuade the farmers to be open to a re-evaluation of their pricing for the betterment of the Trenton community. 


Posted by tammyduffy at 10:25 AM EDT
Updated: Saturday, 27 June 2015 10:26 AM EDT
Tuesday, 23 June 2015
July 4th Weekend Packed with Launch of BATMAN™: The Ride Backwards, Concerts and Special Events
Topic: COMMUNITY INTEREST

 

 July 4th Weekend Packed with Launch of BATMAN

The Ride Backwards, Concerts and Special Events


 

Six Flags Great Adventure unveils a second thrilling roller coaster experience for 2015 as it flips one of its most innovative and adrenaline-charged coasters, BATMAN™: The Ride,  backwardsfor a limited time beginning July 4th weekend. The world’s largest theme park also teams up with Coca-Cola® to celebrate Independence Day with July 4th Fest from July 3 to 5. Guests can enjoy some of the best thrill rides in the world, listen to live music and watch dazzling fireworks displays.

BATMAN™: The Ride becomes even more intense as it undergoes a gravity-defying role reversal from July 4thweekend to Labor Day weekend. 

 

Guests can take on an all-new experience on the world-famous suspended, looping coaster when its chair lift-style train is flipped 180 degrees on the track. The excitement is magnified since guests cannot see the twists and turns that await them as they soar at speeds up to 50 mph through five gut-wrenching inversions. Since opening in 1993, BATMAN™: The Ride has given more than 27 million thrilling rides and reigns as one of the most popular roller coasters in the world. 

 

 

During July 4th Fest, guests can present a can of Coca-Cola® along with an admission ticket, Season Pass or active Membership to enjoy exclusive ride time each morning on some of the park’s most popular coastersincluding El Toro, Kingda Ka and the new El Diablo looping coaster. In the evening, guests can watch as stunning fireworks illuminate the night sky.

Coca-Cola presents Plan B and Tony Dize in concert at the Plymouth Rock Assurance® Arena July 3.  Plan B, a Puerto Rican Reggaeton duo consisting of cousins Chencho and Maldy, rose to fame in 2002 when they released their first studio album, El Mundo Del Plan B: Los Que La Montan. Tony Dize is an American Reggaeton singer of Puerto Rican descent whose most recent hit includes "Duele El Amor." The event is free with theme park admission, Season Pass or active Membership.

 

 

In appreciation for the service and sacrifice made by U.S. military members and their families, Six Flags and Coca-Cola® are again proud to support Operation Homefront as part of July 4th Fest. A portion of tickets sold through Coca-Cola® will benefit Operation Homefront, and from June 29 through July 12, guests will be able to make a special donation to Operation Homefront online. In addition, Six Flags Great Adventure will proudly host 500 military personnel and their families for a day full of fun and thrills.

 

 

Next door at Six Flags Hurricane Harbor, the culinary team is turning up the heat at the new Cabana Cove Bar & Grill. This open-air kitchen features island-style jerk chicken, tri-tip steak sandwiches, juicy hot dogs, fresh salads and more. The park also introduces an upgraded Cabana Cove, with new, luxury cabanas surrounded by a lush, tropical landscape.


Posted by tammyduffy at 8:36 PM EDT
Sunday, 21 June 2015
A Special Kind of Hell
Topic: COMMUNITY INTEREST

 
 
A Special Kind Of Hell
 
 
 
By  Tammy Duffy 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 “I had someone at the Houston police station shoot me with heroin so I could do a story about it. The experience was a special kind of hell. I came out understanding full well how one could be addicted to 'smack,' and quickly.” 

― Dan Rather-1955

 

 Yes, Dan Rather did heroin, ONCE, for a story. It was a special kind of Hell. He was lucky, he survived. 

 


  

 
A good-looking and gifted son or daugher dies due to an overdose of a powerful drug that is indiscriminately claiming new victims every day in our country.
 
The details vary, although sometimes only slightly, in other homes in our county, our state, and our nation. But the irreversible results are the same: The death toll is rising because of overdoses of heroin, or in many cases heroin that contains fentanyl, an opioid characterized as so strong that a speck the size of a sugar crystal can be deadly.
 
In death after death, investigators have reported that the victims most likely thought they were buying heroin, but instead they got fentanyl or heroin that had been cut with or was laced with fentanyl.  This serial killer is invading the illegal drug market. What is your town doing about it? 
 
Fentanyl is deliberately added to heroin to enhance its effect and create a “super high,” according to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. Drug users often turn to heroin because of an escalating cycle of abuse.
 
Abuse involving prescription painkillers has been a topic of conversation and point of concern for years. The opiates that bring blessed relief to people fighting terrible pain — drugs such as morphine and Vicodin — soon fed an addiction for many in our society. Heroin grew to become a cheaper and often more accessible substitute for the painkillers that had taken over the lives of their users. And in this deadly cycle, fentanyl has been used intentionally to increase the high of heroin or secretly by dealers to dilute heroin and increase profits.
 
Heroin has made a comeback. It can be the drug of choice for a user, or it frequently is adopted as an alternative for someone addicted to prescription pain medication who is seeking a cheaper, more accessible alternative. Heroin deaths, long in a decline, have bounced back in the past five years. 
 
Our youth are turning to drugs for a reasons  a parent will never understand. Most of the addicts had outward lives, were gifted musicians, brilliant young men and women, and people considered by many as charming. These same people are dying from overdoses. The addiction results are just in their infancy. They will get worse. It is not a poor man's drug of choice. 
 
Help in the face of such extraordinary loss can come in several ways, starting most simply with education about a growing heroin problem and a campaign to warn of the dangers.
 
State legislators need to pass a homicide-by-drug-delivery law similar to what many states have adopted. The law would punish drug dealers not only for selling illegal drugs but also for deaths that resulted from overdoses.
 
Addiction treatment remains hard to find in this country even though 44,000 Americans die yearly from drug overdoses — more than die from car crashes or any type of injury. Treatment often is difficult to afford, too. Towns are charging, like in Hamilton N.J., astronomical fees to non-profits who focus on drug addiction. Obviously, the leadership has no heart or clear understanding of the drug issues in their own town to do this. It is heartless and cruel to the community to limit access to people for help when there is an epidemic going on. 
 
Drug overdoses are soaring, addiction is growing and treatment is lacking. Solutions may be difficult to find, but our society cannot continue to ignore what is taking place.
 
We hope that these weekly articles are helping create an awareness and importance to get in front of this issue. 

Posted by tammyduffy at 10:14 AM EDT
Updated: Sunday, 21 June 2015 10:16 AM EDT
Saturday, 20 June 2015
THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART TO PRESENT MAJOR RETROSPECTIVE OF DONALD JUDD IN 2017
Topic: ART NEWS


 

 
 THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART TO PRESENT MAJOR RETROSPECTIVE OF DONALD JUDD IN 2017
 
 
By Tammy Duffy 
 
 


 

 
 
 
In the fall of 2017, The Museum of Modern Art will present the most comprehensive exhibition of the work of Donald Judd (American, 1928–1994) to date. Comprising more than 100 works of art gathered from public and private collections around the world, this retrospective aims to provide a multifaceted perspective on Judd.
 
 
Organized by Ann Temkin, The Marie-Josée and Henry Kravis Chief Curator of Painting and Sculpture, in collaboration with Judd Foundation, the exhibition will be installed in the Museum’s second-floor Contemporary Galleries. Building on intensive curatorial research, the exhibition will advance scholarship on Judd's art and introduce his work to new generations of viewers. MoMA will be the sole venue for the exhibition.
 
 
“Half a century after Judd established himself as a leading figure of his time, his legacy demands to be considered anew,” said Ms. Temkin. “The show will cover the entire arc of Judd’s career, including not only quintessential objects from the 1960s and 1970s, but also works made before he arrived at his iconic formal vocabulary, and selections from the remarkable developments of the 1980s.”
 
 
“One of the most important aspects for the understanding of Don’s work is to see it in context with the spaces or with other works of his. This exhibition will give us a good chance to demonstrate just how the art came into being and what Don accomplished with it. In context the individual works gather meaning,” said Flavin Judd, Co-President, Judd Foundation.
 
 
The exhibition and its catalogue will address the great breadth of Judd's artistic vision, which encompassed not only sculptural forms but also painting, printmaking, writing, art criticism, architecture, furniture design, and land preservation, as represented in Judd’s permanently installed homes and studios in Marfa, Texas, and at 101 Spring Street, New York.
 
 
"I made my work to be intelligible to me, with the casual assumption that if it made sense to me, it would to someone else.” —Donald Judd, "Art and Architecture," 1983

Posted by tammyduffy at 12:01 AM EDT
Updated: Saturday, 20 June 2015 12:21 PM EDT
Thursday, 18 June 2015
McCarter Theatre Center Receives $300,000 Grant
Topic: ART NEWS


 

 
 

McCarter Theatre Center Receives $300,000 Grant


McCarter Theatre Center is delighted to announce a significant grant from the James E. and Diane W. Burke Foundation (Burke Foundation) which will launch a new phase of growth for McCarter's Education and Engagement programs and by doing so will bring the transformative power of the arts to more people in our community. This three-year $300,000 grant is one of the largest in support of educational initiatives that McCarter has ever received.
 
McCarter Trustee and Burke Foundation Officer James Burkesaid, "We're so pleased to support McCarter in this way. The arts have such meaning for me, and for the Foundation, and have a larger role to play in the development of tomorrow's citizens and leaders. The Burke Foundation is excited to partner with McCarter Theatre's Education and Engagement programs to bring the richness of the theatrical experience to children who would otherwise not be able to enjoy the magic of theater."


McCarter Theatre Artistic Director Emily Mann said, "We salute the vision and the investment the Burke Foundation has made in the
community and in McCarter. The support of the arts offered by this grant means that over the three year period thousands of young people in the area will be able to have meaningful participation in the performing arts."

The grant period's first year will include an increase in support for initiatives offering arts access and participation to thousands of underserved students across the state. Responding to an ever-growing need for arts organizations to fulfill essential core curriculum standards, funding will be allocated to strengthen McCarter's existing in-school programs across the region including those at Trenton Central High School, New Brunswick Regional Schools, Middlesex County Vocational Technical High School, Princeton Public Schools, and Trenton's Grace Dunn Middle School, among others.


The funding will also allow McCarter to substantially increase the number of fully-subsidized tickets to student matinees and provide bus funding to schools for whom transportation cost is the primary barrier to arts access. While McCarter has long been comm
itted to offering financial aid for after school theatre classes and summer theatre camps, the Burke Foundation gift will also significantly increase the pool of available scholarship funds for qualifying families.

In addition, this grant will enable McCarter to create new programming in partnership with community organizations including Eden Autism Services, Homefront, and Princeton Community Housing. By the end of the first year alone, thousands of additional residents and families could potentially be positively impacted by this expansion.

McCarter Theatre Center, the largest arts organization in the greater Princeton area, launched a major reorganization of its education and engagement programming efforts in the fall of 2013, with a strong focus on community impact and access. Through after-school clas
ses, in-school residencies (now reaching a dozen local schools from Trenton to New Brunswick), adult education classes, community partnerships and more, McCarter is dedicated to bringing the benefits of high-quality arts education to the region. This significant grant by the Burke Foundation continues significant growth for McCarter's mission with regards to education and engagement in the community.

According to Erica Nagel, Director of Education and Engagement for McCarter Theatre Center, "Theatre education increases creativity, collaboration, and artistry among participants, and we are thrilled that so many more young people from diverse economic backgrounds will have the chance to experience the kind of learning and growth our programs are designed to provide. Through transportation funding, ticket subsidies, expanded in-school programs, new community partnerships, and increased scholarship money, the generosity and vision of the Burke Foundation has made it possible to address the areas identified as the most significant barriers to youth arts participation and access in our community."


Posted by tammyduffy at 5:35 PM EDT
Sunday, 14 June 2015
Ethical Responsibilities In Public Health: Let's Get Loud!
Topic: COMMUNITY INTEREST

 

 

By Tammy Duffy

 

 

Ethical Responsibilities In Public Health

Let's Get Loud!

 

 

By Tammy Duffy

 


 

 

The mortality and morbidity caused by the misuse of alcohol, tobacco, and illicit drugs represents a significant burden to public health.  A key part of the public health response to drug problems in developed societies is the collection of epidemiological and social science data to define populations that are at risk, the identification of opportunities for intervention and the evaluation of the effectiveness of different policies in preventing or treating drug misuse and drug-related harm. The systematic use of epidemiological and social science research methods to study illicit drug use is barely 40 years old in the United States of America and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, which have pioneered the approach.

 

Public health programs today constitute a multi-professional inter-organizational environment, where both health service and other organizations are involved. Developing information systems, including the IT security measures needed to suit this complex context, is a challenge. To ensure that all involved organizations work together towards a common goal, i.e., promotion of health, an intuitive strategy would be to share information freely in these programs. However, in practice it is seldom possible to realize this ideal scenario. One reason may be that ethical issues are often ignored in the system development process.  Concerns involving confidentiality caused by geographically referenced health information and influences of professional and organizational codes are a concern and should be a focus for towns. The experience demonstrated in towns shows a blatant disregard of ethical issues. This can result in a prolonged development process for public health information systems.

 

Recently, L.A. Parker, a journalist for the Trentonian, wrote an article that focused on deadly heroin distribution in Trenton and Hamilton. (link to article is below)

 

http://www.trentonian.com/opinion/20150612/la-parker-hamilton-twp-police-launch-search-for-killer-heroin-or-fentanyl

 

In Mr. Parker's article, I will bring to your attention the following quote. " Hamilton police chose not to release information about these heroin issues, believing that a public announcement may increase desires for the three stamped brands, thereby placing more users at risk."

 

I will share an analogy with you. Let's think about the times when grocery stores send out customer notifications on a possible listeria outbreak due to lettuce that was sold between a specific date time. The stores expectation is that your do not use the product and even come to the store for a refund in some cases. Does the leadership in Hamilton want to block these public messages as well? Do they think residents are so dumb that they will run out and purchase listeria riddled lettuce and endanger their health  and lives on purpose? For the leadership to chose not to release information on the heroin issues is no different than this lettuce analogy.  

 

The gig is up. The dealers and the hard core heroin users already know about the "new version" of drug Mr. Parker references in his article. This was reported over a year ago to be in existence right around the corner  in Philadelphia and Camden.  A drug addict will take the risk and not think they could die from it.  The addicts do not care. What the township leadership is ignoring is the possibility of saving the life of the person who is on the fence about taking heroin for the first time. Education is critical in any epidemic. Hamilton is the alcoholic who refuses to admit they are alcoholics. They have a drug problem and they want to keep is silent.

 

In the past, people never wanted to talk about cancer. If a family member had cancer they actually would whisper the word cancer when they spoke about it. During this timeframe the statistics and successes for cures and positive outcomes in cancer treatment was abysmal. Then people decided to get vocal about it. Lobbyist marched on capital hill, research dollars were set aside to make a positive effect. The removal of the silence and whispers saved lives. It has positively changed outcomes and in some cases permanently eradicated many cancers. Let's get loud!

 

If you received a phone call that your child/loved one was in the emergency room for a drug overdose would a hospital not be obligated (if you were their guardian and health care advocate) to share with you what drug they took, what their issue was and how you can get help for your loved one to ensure this overdose did not happen again? Of course, so why is the twp held to a lesser standard?

  

The principle of non-maleficence simply means to “do no harm”. The Public Safety Officer in a town has the direct responsibility to ensure the public is not harmed on purpose. Non-maleficence requires that one should refrain from causing harm or injury or from placing others at risk of harm or injury. In biomedical research, the principle requires researchers to minimize the risks of participation in research. Telling the truth is also relevant to the principle of non-maleficence. Failing to give full information about the risks of participation in research violates the principles of respecting autonomy (by not telling the truth) as well as that of non-maleficence. By keeping silent on the heroin issues, the leadership is putting the residents in grave danger. 

 

Does the Township of Hamilton have a legal and ethical obligation to share the information with the community as it pertains the release of information about these heroin issues? Is their comment that they believe that a public announcement may increase desires for the three stamped brands, thereby placing more users at risk an acceptable response?

 

We have reached out to the NJ State Addiction Services, Div. of Human Services to gather further information on this topic. We will share with you what the legal and ethical obligations are of towns to the communities they serve once we hear back from them.

 

 

 

 

 

 


 


Posted by tammyduffy at 6:36 PM EDT
Saturday, 13 June 2015
Shh, Our Town Is Addicted
Topic: COMMUNITY INTEREST

 


 

 


 

 
Using heroin can kill you, but it may not be in the way you think.
 

The numbers

Drug overdose deaths in the United States have risen steadily since 1970. Painkillers actually kill more Americans than heroin and cocaine combined, according to the Centers for Disease Control, but heroin is still one of the No. 1 killers of illegal drug users. Only one in 10 heroin overdoses ends in death.

Overdose deaths from heroin have increased recently,and heroin use is also on the riseIn 2011, 4.2 million Americans over the age of 11 had tried heroin at least once, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

An estimaged 23% of them will become addicts. And it's addicts who die more frequently than new users, studies show.

How heroin works

Heroin is most often mixed with water and injected. Injecting it minimizes the lag time between when the drug is taken and effects are felt -- with injection, the effects are almost immediate.

It can also be smoked, snorted or eaten, but smoking or eating destroys some of the drug and mutes its effects.

When someone takes heroin there is an immediate rush. Then the body feels an extreme form of relaxation and a decreased sense of pain.

What's happening inside the body is the heroin is turning into morphine. Morphine has a chemical structure similiar to endorphins -- the chemicals your brain makes when you feel stressed out or are in pain. Endorphins inhibit your neurons from firing, so they halt pain and create a good feeling.

Morphine, acting like your endorphins, binds to molecules in your brain called opioid receptors. When those receptors are blocked, that creates a high.

Why you die

Most people die from heroin overdoses when their bodies forget to breathe.

Heroin makes someone calm and a little bit sleepy, but if you take too much then you can fall asleep, and when you are asleep your respiratory drive shuts down.

Usually when you are sleeping, your body naturally remembers to breathe. In the case of a heroin overdose, you fall asleep and essentially your body forgets."

A heroin overdose can also cause your blood pressure to dip significantly and cause your heart to fail.

Studies show intravenous heroin users are 300 times more likely to die from infectious endocarditis, an infection of the surface of the heart.

Heroin use can also cause an arrhythmia -- a problem with the rate or rhythm of the heartbeat. During an arrhythmia, the heart may not be able to pump enough blood to the body, and lack of blood flow affects your brain, heart and other organs.

Heroin use can also cause pulmonary edema. That's when the heart can't pump blood to the body well. The blood can back up into your veins, taking that blood through your lungs and to the left side of the heart.

As pressure in the blood vessels increases and fluid goes into the alveoli, the air spaces in the lungs, this reduces the normal flow of oxygen through your lungs, making it hard to breathe. This too can give you a heart attack or lead to kidney failure.

Heroin can also come with other toxic contaminants that can harm a user -- although deaths from such instances, while not unheard of, are thought to be rare.

Studies suggest instantaneous death is unusual. One study showed such deaths, where a needle and syringe are still in place, account for only 14% of heroin-related deaths.

Heroin deaths increase when...

There are some common social characteristics in heroin deaths. Most fatalities involve men, particularly those who have struggled with other drugs or alcohol and other drugs or alcohol are often present.

While many are single, most users die in their homes and/or in the company of another person.

An addict does have a much higher chance of dying if he or she leaves treatment. The risk of death is higher for newly clean heroin addicts. A number of fatalities appear to happen after periods of reduced use. 

In fact, long-term users who die from overdoses are likely to have heroin levels no higher than those who survive.

That may be in part because those who are newly clean don't know how much of the drug to give themselves any more. They won't need the same amount to get high as when they were using more regularly.

There are also some studies that show tolerance to the respiratory depressive effects of opiates increases at a slower rate than tolerance to the euphoric and analgesic effects. As your tolerance to the drug develops, you typically need more of it to produce the high you are used to getting. This may be why long-term users are potentially at greater risk of overdose than novices.

Statistics suggest that newer heroin users aren't the ones most likely to die. One study showed only 17% of the deaths studied were in new heroin users.

However, newer users can overdose because they don't know how much drug to take, compared to experienced users. I think it is misleading to say you would not die if you only use it once or twice. To not educate your community is just wrong. For a police department and town leadership to think that you will start a buying binge on Heroin if you make the community aware, is in a word, RECKLESS.

 


Posted by tammyduffy at 8:02 PM EDT
More Photos from Boxing Weekend
Topic: COMMUNITY INTEREST


 

 
 
MORE PHOTOS FROM DAY TWO FROM THE
 
BOXING HALL OF FAME 
 
 
 
Copy link below to your browser 
 
 
 https://www.facebook.com/Duffyculturalcourture?fref=ts#

Posted by tammyduffy at 10:20 AM EDT
Updated: Saturday, 13 June 2015 10:32 AM EDT
PHOTOS FROM TODAY's 5K and 20K run at the Boxing Hall of Fame
Topic: COMMUNITY INTEREST


 

 
 
PHOTOS FROM TODAY's 5K and 20K run
 
at the Boxing Hall of Fame
 
 
Click on link below
 
 
 https://www.facebook.com/Duffyculturalcourture?fref=ts

Posted by tammyduffy at 10:10 AM EDT
Updated: Saturday, 13 June 2015 10:12 AM EDT

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