Monday, October 27, 2014


Dietary Supplements with Banned Drugs Often Still on Sale Long After Recalls Issued
October 22nd, 2014/


Dietary supplements containing banned drugs often remain on sale long after they have been recalled by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), doctors at Harvard Medical School have found.

The FDA has identified more than 400 supplement brands that contain banned pharmaceutical ingredients, and has issued a recall for 70 percent of them, according toReuters.

The study involved 27 supplements recalled between 2009 and 2012. They were marketed for sports enhancement, weight loss and sexual enhancement. Two-thirds were manufactured in the United States, the article notes. The researchers purchased the supplements from manufacturer websites at least eight months and up to four years after they were recalled.

After testing the supplements’ chemical makeup, the researchers found 18 of the supplements still contained a banned pharmaceutical ingredient. These included a weight loss drug linked to heart attack and stroke called sibutramine, and a laxative called phenolphthalein that is being removed from many markets because of a potential link to cancer. The findings appear in JAMA.

“There’s no question that these supplements that contain pharmaceuticals are not allowed to be sold, there are clear-cut laws,” lead author Dr. Pieter A. Cohen told Reuters.

The FDA noted the supply chain for dietary supplements is extremely fragmented. “One product manufactured by an unknown company overseas may be sold by dozens of different distributors in the United States,” the agency said in a statement. “The individuals and businesses selling these products generally are difficult to locate, operate out of residential homes, and distribute via Internet, small stores, and mail. Products are shipped through the international mail facilities and are often misdeclared as unrelated goods to avoid detection. Even after recall and enforcement action against one major distributor, the product may continue to be widely sold.”


DAILY NEWSLETTER October 27, 2014


Hi Joseph,
We picked out 5 shows for you: HR Strategist Dethra Giles, Occult Master Lon Milo DuQuette, Ickey Woods, Constantine's Harold Perrineau, Captain Lee Rosbach



SHOWS PICKED JUST FOR YOU


by Survival Radio Network
Tune into "the Conversation" when our guest will be “The Entrepreneur’s HR Strategist Dethra Giles. Dethra, the managing partner of ExecuPrep will be sharing HR tips to growing successful companies.






by Supernatural Girlz Radio
Hear the spookiest tales in horror literature that secretly contain the answers to some of life's biggest mysteries. Dare to join us and Occult Master Lon Milo DuQuette.These stories will stay with you, haunting you from the shadows...eternally.






by Fan vs Fan Radio Network
NFL Standard welcomes Ickey Woods, former fullback who played his entire NFL career (1988 to 1991) with the Cincinnati Bengals. He played college football at UNLV. He is best remembered for his "Ickey Shuffle" end zone dance, performed each time he scored.







by Tammy Jones Gibbs
That's Entertainment's host Tammy Jones-Gibbs will be talking with actor Harold Perrineau to talk about his new role on the new NBC supernatural series, "Constantine."






by Law Offices of Peter J Lamont
This week Host Peter Lamont talks to Captain Lee Rosbach, star of Bravo's hit show, Below Deck. Captain Lee will discuss leadership, the challenges of being the literal and figurative captain of the ship, his management style and more.






BEST OF LIFESTYLE

By The Love Zone USA


By Main Street Universe


By Amy Peikoff


By News for the Soul


By FantasyGuru



TOP EPISODES

1 SPIRITUALITY
By Jennifer Hoffman


2 LIFESTYLE
By Dating Women Radio Show


3 SPIRITUALITY
By BodyMindSpirit Radio


4 SPIRITUALITY
By Main Street Universe


5 NEWS
By Key West Lou






Spread the Word

Thursday, October 23, 2014










Tomorrow night October 23rd at 7:00pm EST on the Addict’s Mom Live Video Online Meeting on In the Rooms topic will be Understanding Codependency. To join us sign up for f.ree at www.intherooms.com, you must log in with Google Chrome or Firefox. Sign on at about 6:55pm, please check your settings to make sure your microphone is on.

**Remember You Can Remain Anonymous**

Codependency can be so very painful and debilitating.

For codependents, being open and honest in close relationships may be difficult. Instead of being assertive, initiating action, and meeting your own needs, you hide your truth, react, and feel responsible for others. You become anxious and try to manage, c...ontrol, and manipulate, often by pleasing or giving advice. Some codependents turn themselves into pretzels trying to accommodate others, because they feel too guilty to say “No.”


Contrary to what you might think, not all codependents are caretakers or are even in a relationship. Codependents have all different personalities, and symptoms vary in type and severity among them. There are codependents who seek closeness, while others avoid it. Some are addicts, bullies, selfish, and needy, or may appear independent and confident, but they control, or are controlled by, a personal relationship or their addiction. A relationship marked by addiction or abuse is a sign of codependency. But not all codependent relationships are abusive. Sometimes they are just very out of balance where one person is the contributor and keeps the relationship going, and the other is the consumer and doesn’t contribute much and is unavailable in many ways. Codependency is about control, enabling, care-taking, and looking outside of ourselves, being needed, in order to fill that hole inside.

Barbara Theodosiou, founder of The Addict’s Mom will be speaking heart to heart with Debbie Sherrick an expert on Co-dependency with over 25 years of experience.

About Debbie Sherrick:

Debbie Sherrick has been motivated by her own personal journey to healing and health, Debbie Sherrick is a certified Holistic Health Counselor and Codependency Life Coach teaching people how to unite mind, body and spirit for a successful healthy life style.

Debbie is the owner of Inside Out Wellness Inc. http://insideoutwellnesscoach.com







 


PCB's Fall/Winter 2014 Online Newsletter is now available!
Click here to read the latest edition.

PCB, 298 S. Progress Avenue, Harrisburg, PA 17109

logoORGANIZING THE
RECOVERY COMMUNITY
Donate
HIV & Recovery in the Workplace: What You Need to Know

Monday October 27, 2014 from 12:00 - 1:30 PM EST

Join Faces & Voices of Recovery and Young People in Recovery for a webinar where you will learn about:
  •     Addressing the rights of people with HIV and substance use disorder in the workplace
  •     The Americans with Disabilities Act and how it affects them
  •     What rights are protected and which are not
  •     Bsic legal concepts around employment and determination for people with HIV and substance use disorder
  •     Best practices around human resources and recovery in the workplace
Presented by:
Douglas Rudolph, Chief Policy Officer for Young People in Recovery

Registration deadline is October 24, 2014. The webinar will be recorded and available online.

Peer Support Services for People with Substance Use Disorders and HIV

Wednesday October 29, 2014 from 12:00 - 1:30 PM EST


Join Faces & Voices of Recovery for a webinar presented by Ben Bass, Faces & Voices Board Member. He will draw on his experience with the Texas Recovery Initiative and the El Paso Alliance to describe how providers can move support services for people with substance use disorder and HIV into a recovery oriented system of care; the background of the movement to do so in Texas and beyond; best practices in the field; and the growth of peer recovery and HIV supports.

Presented by:
Ben Bass, Executive Director of the El Paso Alliance and a board member of Faces & Voices of Recovery

Registration deadline is October 28, 2014. The webinar will be recorded and available online.

Help get the word out with our flyer.

These webinars are supported by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration’s Center for Substance Abuse Treatment.

Wednesday, October 22, 2014


Synthetic Marijuana-Related ER Visits More Than Doubled in One Year
October 21st, 2014/



A new government report finds emergency rooms visits related to synthetic marijuana more than doubled between 2010 and 2011, HealthDay reports.

Synthetic marijuana, also known as “K2” or “Spice,” is especially dangerous because there is a widespread misconception these drugs are safe and legal, according to Pamela Hyde, Administrator at the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). “These injury reports compel us to get the word out to all segments of the community — especially youth — that these products can cause significant harm,” she noted in a news release.

Emergency rooms reported more than 28,500 visits linked to synthetic marijuana in 2011, up from 11,400 in 2010, according to the report. Among teens ages 12 to 17, the number of visits linked to synthetic marijuana rose from about 3,800 to nearly 7,600 during that year. Among young adults ages 18 to 20, ER visits linked to synthetic marijuana rose from about 2,000 to more than 8,000.

Short-term effects of synthetic marijuana include loss of control, lack of pain response, increased agitation, pale skin, seizures, vomiting, profuse sweating, uncontrolled/spastic body movements, elevated blood pressure, heart rate and palpitations. The drug takes effect in three to five minutes, and the high lasts from one to eight hours. In addition to physical signs of use, users may experience severe paranoia, delusions, hallucinations and increased agitation. Its long-term effects are unknown.

The Synthetic Drug Prevention Act of 2012 specifically prohibits the sale or possession of some types of synthetic marijuana. The Drug Enforcement Administration and nearly all states have also taken some regulatory action against these products once they have been identified, according to SAMHSA. “However manufacturers of these compounds continue to modify their chemical structures in an attempt to evade current laws,” the agency notes.