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Addicts overwhelm Kentucky's drug treatment options
In a state plagued by one of the worst prescription drug abuse problems in the nation, where nearly 1,000 people a year die of overdoses, a Courier-Journal investigation has found that Kentucky's treatment options are woefully limited, especially for …
Read more on The Courier-Journal

Opposite argument about marijuana leads to same conclusion
With more than 50 years in the health care field, and the first M.D. to be board-certified in occupational and environmental medicine in Nevada (1980) and additional certification as a medical review officer for drug surveillance and rehab, I think I …
Read more on Las Vegas Review-Journal

Public invited to see new Edgewater drug rehab center
Public invited to see new Edgewater drug rehab center. By Mark I. Johnson STAFF WRITER … "What makes us unique is that we are a 40-day treatment program," said Marshall, a 56-year-old former narcotics investigator, who with his son, Jimmy, 29, a …
Read more on Daytona Beach News-Journal

Question by Tonya W: How to use Air dusters?
I am doing a paper at school on how are duster and i didn’t know how you actually got High with it. How do you do it?

Best answer:

Answer by Robert W
Read this article on the dangers of ‘dusting’.

Inhalant abuse has been on the rise nationwide, and more teens are experiencing the tragic effects of this cheap high. NBC News correspondent Peter Alexander reports on how a common household product, a computer cleaner, can result in a deadly high.

There’s a new way to get high, and you could have it right next to your desk at home. They’re designed to clean your computer but, if inhaled, these popular products have the potential to kill.

It’s called “dusting” — the term comes from the cleaning brand “Dust Off” — and it has become a teenager’s new cheap and easily accessible high, despite a warning on the side of each canister.
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This form of inhalant abuse, “huffing,” has been around for years, but dusting is the more specific term associated with the use of cans of any common aerosolized computer keyboard cleaner that contains compressed gas.

One teen, 18-year-old Jessie Stotz, is now in rehab at the Pathway Family Center in Indianapolis because of dusting.

“There wasn’t the hassle of finding somebody to buy it for you and stuff, you could walk into a store, being 13 years old, and buy it yourself,” says Stotz.

But one hit can be crippling, as 15-year-old Ben Goudberg experienced in California.

“I couldn’t move for three to four minutes, and I was staring at a door thinking I wanted to get up and go and touch it and I couldn’t do it,” says Goudberg. “It’s one of the scariest feelings in the world.”

The high from the gas paralyzes the user for several minutes and gives a feeling of euphoria. Both dusting and huffing can result in damage to the brain, lungs, heart, kidneys and liver, and can cause death. In computer cleaning products, a freon type of gas, or fluorinated hydrocarbon, is the dangerous ingredient.

The dangerous practice was dramatized in the film “Thirteen.” In the opening scene, the two actresses are sitting on a bed, “dusting,” and then slapping each other out of their trancelike states.

“Sudden sniffing death” describes the process of inhaled hydrocarbons provoking irregular heart rhythms in the victim, which leads to sudden fatal cardiac arrest in even very young and healthy hearts.

“Just that fast a kid could experience intoxication,” says John Daily, a drug counselor at New Directions — and just that fast they could die. The compressed air in the cleaners fills a person’s lungs, keeping oxygen out and potentially stopping the heart.

Some retailers, like Staples and Wal-Mart, now restrict the sales of computer cleaners to buyers over 18 years of age, and many have placed warning labels on the top of cans.

But Jeff Williams, a Cleveland police officer whose son Kyle tragically died in March while trying dusting, thinks more needs to be done. Williams says there is already one keyboard cleaning product on the market that adds a bitter smell and taste to the chemicals, making them unpalatable, and he says all manufacturers should do the same. Williams also thinks that retailers need to do a better job of policing who they sell to.

Dusting is part of a larger problem involving inhalants, with huffing on the rise. In 2002, more than a million people abused them for the first time — the vast majority in their teens.

The National Survey on Drug Use and Health found that inhalant experimentation is initiated earlier than any other illicit substance, with young females starting before young males. Also, a higher percentage of 12 and 13 year olds had used inhalants than marijuana.

Inhalant abuse is often more dangerous and difficult to detect than other drug abuse. Inhalants such as glue, lighter fluid and spray paint are completely legal and found in every home — which often leads kids to think they are harmless — and abusers need to conceal only the act of inhaling, not the product.

But inhalants are addictive physically and psychologically, almost as much as alcohol.

“Not only was it the inhalant that was addictive, it was the lifestyle, the friends and the attention that I would receive when I did it,” says Jessie Stotz.
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But in the deadly new world of dusting, someone’s first time seeking the high may also be their last.

In the United Kingdom, where deaths associated with these substances are tracked, 39 percent of the deaths occurred during the victim’s first time.

Wolfe says the most important way to combat this drug abuse is to educate parents about it and to inform kids that the inhalants can kill them on the first try.

Other prevention methods include reading product labels regarding safety issues, and choosing to minimize aerosols in households by using pump sprays instead.

The warning signs of dusting are not easily detected, but these signs may indicate abuse:

* Disappearance of the product at a rapid rate
* Empty cans or containers of chemicals in tra

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Addicts overwhelm Kentucky's drug treatment options
In a state plagued by one of the worst prescription drug abuse problems in the nation, where nearly 1,000 people a year die of overdoses, a Courier-Journal investigation has found that Kentucky's treatment options are woefully limited, especially for …
Read more on The Courier-Journal

Free Nicotine Replacement During Rehab Helps Patients Quit
AVENTURA, Florida — Providing patients in residential substance abuse rehabilitation programs access to free-of-charge nicotine replacement therapy enhances smoking reduction and cessation, new research shows. Dr. Stephanie Peglow. "Smoking cessation …
Read more on Medscape

Grants Will Create New National Autism Center in Orange County
The center, which does not yet have a location, will fund a drug research program as well. “Today, nothing of … Additionally, Children's Hospital of Orange County (CHOC) made a five-year commitment to fund specialty physicians and rehabilitation …
Read more on VoiceofOC (blog)

Lockyer's Restraining Order Ends
Earlier this year, the former Alameda County Supervisor had claimed her boyfriend attacked her in a hotel room, but charges were never filed. The estranged wife of State Treasurer Bill Lockyer remains in drug rehab in Orange County. She's facing felony …
Read more on KMJ Now

Loren Dean, Actor Known as Heavy or for Support Roles, Gets Unwelcome
Born Loren Dean Jovicic, he is not the man who passed himself off as the 43-year-old actor at a San Clemente drug rehab center Tuesday. That person, according to the Orange County Sheriff's Department, was Loren Dean Breckenridge III, a 46-year-old …
Read more on OC Weekly (blog)

Coroner: Eva Rausing died as result of drug abuse
I grew up with poor junkies whose rehab programs were annual stays in county jails during the winter months. They kicked the jones while having 3 hots and a cot. When released in the spring they went back to their drugs of choice. They all died before …
Read more on Yahoo! News (blog)

Growing number are struggling to deal with drug addictions and homelessness
In addition, Portland has homeless shelters, food programs, an organization for homeless youth called Outside In, and such religious organizations as Union Gospel Mission, which offers a Christian-based addiction recovery program. This array of …
Read more on The Courier-Journal

Addicts overwhelm Kentucky's drug treatment options
“Despite a historic recession, Kentucky has expanded its support of substance abuse treatment programs over the past few years as part of the administration's overall effort to combat drug abuse,” Richardson said. But officials and experts agree …
Read more on The Courier-Journal

Foul Appetites: Crime and Punishment in the Hitman Series
Hitman Sidebar 'Flatline', a mission from Blood Money literally set in a rehab clinic, is easily the most striking. The situation is … It's a clever setup because we already think about addiction in this way—both a crime and a sickness, a moral …
Read more on Gameranx

Michael Smerconish: In defense of the DJs
The Australian radio DJs at the center of the prank phone-call controversy, Michael Christian and Mel Greig, during a TV interview last week. The Australian radio DJs at the center of the prank phone-call controversy, Michael Gallery: Michael …
Read more on Philadelphia Inquirer

A new prescription to treat prescription drug abuse
The prescription trial was announced last month, and is being funded by the National Institutes for Drug Abuse (NIDA), part of the National Institutes of Health. Another trial is already underway to determine whether Ibudilast would be helpful in …
Read more on SmartPlanet.com (blog)

Treating addiction as a public health issue, not a crime
The drugs of choice for an increasing number of Americans are prescription painkillers. Nowhere is the problem more apparent than Houston, where the renowned medical center area has become “a national hotspot for prescription drug abuse,” according to …
Read more on Houston Chronicle (blog)

Promising new treatment for cocaine addiction adds stimulant drugs
Cocaine dependence is a devilishly difficult addiction to break, owing to the drug's unique chemical ability both to reward users and to disrupt their impulse-control mechanisms. But a surprising drug combination may offer an equally clever way to …
Read more on Los Angeles Times

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