Tuesday, November 11, 2014


Are you a mother of an addict? Please know you are not alone. Over 14,000 mothers of addicted children are united on the Addict's Mom Face book group. We are open 24/7 to listen, share and support one another. You are NOT alone. Please join us, become part of our TAM family. We are waiting to welcome you with open arms!






“Spare your people, O Lord.”

(Joel 2: 15-16)



Join Us

Assembly of Prayer and Repentance for the

United States of America







SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 23RD 3 -7 PM

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24TH 7 - 9 PM

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25TH 7 - 9 PM

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26TH 

WHERE:

The Lighthouse Healing Rooms of Bucks County

245 Mill Street

Bristol, PA 19007

(609) 477-8101

Saturday, November 8, 2014


November 8 Chp 56 v 8 TWELVE STEPPING WITH STRENGTH FROM THE PSALMS


You keep track of all my sorrows .

You have collected all my tears in your bottle .

You have recorded each one in your book.


STEP 2 - Came to believe that a Power greater (God) than ourselves could restore us to sanity.



This is one of the most powerful verses I have ever read out of Gods Big book. Collects my tears , records my sorrows. The first thing that tells me is there is a God above and He is watching over me so closely that He knows of all my sorrows , ALL ,not some. he cares so much about me that He writes them down in a book that has my name on it. With that He has a bottle to catch my tears.I had no idea their was a bottle that big. For those of you drowning in a sea of sadness believing that loneliness will be the log that sinks you into despair then death .This scripture lifts the log and parts the water so you no longer will drown but God will place you on solid ground. Step two is true and there is a God who loves you and I can picture Him with a tear in is eye every time your hurt and cry yourself to sleep believing no one loves you . Stop looking to the world for love you will never find it all the world has to give is pain . God is a loving Father who cares and loves you more than you will ever know .


Zephaniah 3:17 - The LORD your God is in your midst, a mighty one who will save; he will rejoice over you with gladness; he will quiet you by his love; he will exult over you with loud singing.
By Joseph Dickerson


The Fix: Addiction and Recovery, Straight Up
Best of the Week:
October 31–November 7
COMING UP IN THE FIX// Harm Reduction Conference Report * Bob Forrest *Addiction Memoirs * Miss Wisconsin * Prison Drug Smuggling by Seth Ferranti *Young, Sober, and Single * PLUS: Other incisive articles
CARRYING ON// A Sister's Grief and Charity
When my friend Alex was found dead, his sister Chelsea started an organization that turned the tragedy into something far more than a sad loss.
By Zachary Siegel
PROFESSIONAL VOICES// Depression: A Drop to Diagnose
Professional Voices returns to The Fix—Today's Column: The onward march of the medicalization of psychiatry and addiction treatment.
By Richard Juman
SPIRITUALITY// Have Some Compassion!
Renowned Buddhist teacher Jack Kornfield discusses how compassion, forgiveness and mindfulness can help free you from addiction.
By Cathy Cassata
LGBT// Sober Trans Housing
Many treatment centers and sober houses claim to be gay and trans-friendly, but that’s not always the case.
By Jason Parsley
SOBER LIVING// Homeless, Hungry and High
A former marine turned crack addict finds himself panhandling and running from the law until a wakeup call in the back of a police cruiser.
By Timothy Michael Biron
 
BEST OF THE QUICK FIX
So How Did Marijuana Do In the Election?
Uber's 'Price Surging' Policy Accused of Manipulating Drunk People
Darkcoin Now the Cryptocurrency of Choice for Online Drug Deals
California Reduces Drug Possession to Misdemeanor With Prop 47
One In Five UK Drug Users Unaware They Have Hep C
Silk Road 2.0 Operator Arrested, Faces 10 Years Behind Bars
COMMENT OF THE WEEK
Street Beat
This week, Timothy Michael Biron told his story aboutliving as a homeless addict. Readers appreciated his honest storytelling:
You're story hit home for me. I cried the whole way through. I felt like I was reading about myself, but with one difference I had a family and a daughter . They would take me back every time. Even every time I went to prison, which was 4 times. You're story gives me hope. I'm on a lot of meds for bi-polar and manic depression and when I have my low days its so hard not to fail. Sometimes I do and sometimes I don't. I'm about to check myself into another rehab so we'll see. I'm a crack addict, dope fiend, pill head and junkie. I hope it works because my daughter is 12 and my parents are in their 60's and they wanna make sure I'm ok before they pass on. Well thanks for you're story you've giving me a lot of hope

-nola girl


Joseph, check out the latest video from your channel subscriptions for Nov 7, 2014.
KLEAN Radio - 11/02/2014 Dr. Wendy Walsh Episode Highlights
2 days ago  •  39 views
Klean Radio
  + 1 more  

Friday, November 7, 2014



RxStat Program Uses Multiple Data Sources to Reduce Opioid Overdoses

/BY CELIA VIMONT

November 5th, 2014/ 

Taking Narcotic Pills, a leading prescription drug that is abused.




A public health and public safety partnership program in New York City called RxStat is using data from different government agencies to pinpoint opioid overdoses and to make changes to reduce the toll of prescription drug abuse. The goal is to reduce overdose deaths and to drive home the message that opioid overdose deaths are preventable.




RxStat is housed at the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (Health Department). It involves timely analysis of drug misuse indicators from multiple data sources, according to Dr. Denise Paone, Director of Research & Surveillance Bureau of Alcohol & Drug Use Prevention, Care & Treatment at the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. “If you have timely data, you can find emerging issues and respond rapidly,” she says.




The data includes emergency room visits to city hospitals for opioid overdoses, Fire Department and Emergency Medical Services calls about overdoses, deaths due to opioids, prescription data from the state, and information from the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office.




“If we see an increase in opioid activity in certain neighborhoods, we’ll go out to those communities and get more data,” Paone says. “Then we’ll respond with programs and initiatives.”




When the RxStat staff looked at the data, they saw rates of opioid overdoses were three times higher in Staten Island compared with the city’s other boroughs. Staten Islanders filled prescriptions for opioid painkillers at higher rates in 2012, had a longer median day supply, and were more likely to have high-dose prescriptions, compared with the city’s other boroughs.




“We took a comprehensive approach. We conducted a ‘detailing’ campaign visiting 1,000 physicians, nurse practitioners and physicians’ assistants to explain judicious prescribing, and conducted follow-up visits with most of them,” she notes. The campaign included one-on-one visits from Health Department representatives who delivered key prescribing recommendations, clinical tools and patient education materials.




Doctors were advised to avoid prescribing opioids for chronic non-cancer, non-end-of-life pain, such as for low back pain, arthritis, headache or fibromyalgia. They were told that when opioids are warranted for acute pain, a three-day supply is usually sufficient. They were also urged to avoid whenever possible prescribing opioids in patients taking benzodiazepines.




The Health Department produced public service announcements to increase awareness of the risk of opioid analgesic overdoses. One ad featured a testimonial from a mother who lost her son to an opioid painkiller overdose, and another showed a New York City resident in recovery.




The staff also held meetings with community groups and conducted two forums with doctors on Staten Island. Paone and her colleagues are now evaluating the data, and will find out soon whether changes in doctors’ knowledge about opioids has translated into a decrease in prescriptions, and high-dose prescriptions in particular.




The program has expanded to other areas of the city. Last year the RxStat staff noted an increase in opioid-related deaths in Queens. “We held town hall meetings and we’ve been doing presentations with community groups,” Paone says. The program is now starting a campaign to visit doctors in the Bronx.




RxStat can be replicated in other areas, even in cities and towns with far fewer resources than New York, according to Paone. “They may not be able to reproduce every component, but they can obtain the data and do a detailing campaign.”




The program has released a technical assistance manual to explain how it works.