Friday, December 5, 2014


Almost 8 Percent of Americans are Moderately to Severely Depressed
December 4th, 2014/


An estimated 7.6 percent of Americans ages 12 and up are moderately to severely depressed, according to a new study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Of those with severe symptoms, only 35 percent reported having contact with a mental health professional in the past year.

“Not enough people are getting appropriate treatment for depression,” lead author Laura Pratt, with the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics, told HealthDay. “People with severe depression should be getting psychotherapy. Some might need complicated medication regimens, which psychiatrists are better equipped to do, which makes it even more concerning that only 35 percent of people with severe depression have seen a mental health professional.”

About 3 percent of Americans had symptoms of severe depression between 2009 and 2012, the study found. Just over 3 percent of black people reported severe depression, compared with 2.6 percent of white people.

Females had higher rates of depression than males in every age group. The highest rate of depression, 12.3 percent, was found in women ages 40–59. People living below the poverty level were nearly 2.5 times more likely to have depression than those at or above the poverty level. Almost 43 percent of people with severe depressive symptoms reported serious difficulties in work, home, and social activities.
   I remember sitting in our dining hall last year almost across from Jacqueline when she said this was her "first Christmas". I was blown away!

 
     How could someone in there twenties make such a statement? Reading her testimony again today, I was moved to tears. What a powerful proclamation of the power of God and the love of God shown through the gift of His Son.

 
     Jacqueline's family was constantly moving and her father "wasn't in the picture". The sexual, physical and emotional abuse she suffered as a child produced a life filled with trauma, and years when she became heavily addicted to drugs.

 
     It was that addiction and the inability to deal with the suffering in her life that brought Jacqueline to His Mansion.        

 
     "My first impression of His Mansion was shock," she says. "I was shocked at the physical beauty of the place and the sense of peace. I was also scared being around so many people all the time...I didn't know what to expect."

 
     That has changed by the time last Christmas came around. "I was beyond blessed with gifts from people I didn't even know; the family dinners, the Advent series in the church and the play in the barn."

 
     "I cried often because there was so much love and beauty. I hope future holidays will be good and I want to continue experiencing them for what they truly are: a celebration of Christ with family and friends!"

 
     As I reflected on Jacqueline's story and the up coming Christmas season, I was reminded of when the angels appears to the shepherds and begins to speak in a thunderous voice, "Behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy which shall be unto all people!"

 
     The shepherds hurry to Bethlehem. They see Mary and the Babe. And when they have seen Him, "they spread the word concerning what had been told them about this child, and all who heard it were amazed".
     
     Today, you and I are the shepherds. And the message is the same: "Good tidings of great joy!" 

 
     We are the shepherds.  And young people like Jacqueline, are souls loved by God who need His guidance and His direction to set their lives back on the right path.

 
     As you have seen in this amazing testimony, hearts are filled with the love of Jesus, we also want to give them some wonderful new memories of the celebration of His birth.

 
     Your special Christmas Gift of $100, $25 or $50 will be a means in which God shares His love with some very lonely and broken young men and women that will creative wonderful new memories of the holidays with us here on The Hill.

 
     Please continue to be a part of what God is doing here at His Mansion by giving a gift on our website at HisMansion.com.

 
     May you and those you loved be blessed this Christmas,
Ed Perrine, CEO

 
P.S. Thank you for your passion to see lives restored live changes this Christmas season.



Free Community Seminar


Presented by 


Livengrin's Family Services Department 


Monday, December 8, 2014, from 6-8 pm


Topic: Medical Aspects of Addiction


Presented by Mark C. Wallen, MD, FASAM



Livengrin Counseling Center -- Oxford Valley


195 Bristol-Oxford Valley Road


Langhorne, PA 19047


To register for the sessions or for more information, 


call Dana Cohen, Family Therapist -- 215.638.5200 x162 

Ample free parking!

For additional information online, visit: http://www.livengrin.org/events


STAY CONNECTED: 













Thursday, December 4, 2014

December 4 Chp 105 v 4 TWELVE STEPPING WITH STRENGTH FROM THE PSALMS



Search for the Lord and for his strength ,continually seek Him.


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




How bad do want your freedom , as bad as you want that next fix. You are willing to search the Bad lands high and low trying to find your fix .All of sudden you get caught up in some crazy sh.. and you drop too your knees in the holding cell crying to God ,promising you wont do it again , if He helps you get out of it . As soon as you get out the prayer is forgotten and your at it again. Why are we so hell bent on self destruction. Will we escape this chemical hell before its too late .It is a yes for me and my freedom came when I got serious with God . My drug had a super natural unbreakable grip on my life. The more I used the stronger that grip got. Once you get so buried in your addiction the only thing in this world and outta this world that can break that grip is the GOD you were crying to in that cell .Some times that chemical hell can be used by GOD to make you well. Addiction is the only battle we can win by giving up .



(2 Corinthians 1:10) We were under great pressure, far beyond our ability to endure, so that we despaired even of life. Indeed, in our hearts we felt the sentence of death. But this happened that we might not rely on ourselves but on God, who raises the dead. He has delivered us from such a deadly peril, and He will deliver us. On Him we have set our hope that He will continue to deliver us.
By Joseph Dickerson

Pharmacies Stock “Meth-Resistant” Cold Medications – and See Drop in Community Meth Labs
December 3rd, 2014/
0

In several states across the country, lawmakers are gearing up to debate whether pseudoephedrine (PSE), an ingredient in cold medications like Sudafed, should require a prescription. While PSE has long been an ingredient that consumers have relied on to treat nasal congestion, it is also one of the main ingredients used to make methamphetamine (meth).

According to data from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Administration, over 100,000 more people used meth in 2013 than in the previous year. Meth is a highly addictive illegal drug that can be produced relatively easily by combining household chemical ingredients with these common over-the-counter cold medicines. The impact of meth use and production extends far beyond those who use and abuse the drug, spurring unintended “collateral damage” for the surrounding communities including fires caused by lab explosions, the cost of foster care for children whose parents are drug users and toxic waste from the chemicals used to make the dangerous drug.

Advocates of the prescription-only legislation believe that it will be more difficult for meth producers to get their hands on PSE products, which would in-turn decrease meth-related crime and lab incidents. However, others argue that requiring a prescription for these cold medications would punish innocent cold and allergy sufferers, who would sacrifice extra time and money for doctors’ visits to acquire the prescription.

There is a trend developing locally that is impacting meth production in a positive way, all without enacting sweeping law changes. Many pharmacies across the country are taking the issue into their own hands by making a change in the type of PSE products they sell. Their relatively simple switch to “meth-resistant” pseudoephedrine products has started to drive down illegitimate PSE sales and reduce meth labs in areas of the country. Over the past two years, nearly 30,000 pharmacies nationwide have started stocking this new type of pseudoephedrine, which includes technology that makes it harder to convert the cold medicine into meth.

Pharmacies in West Virginia – including CVS, Rite Aid and the local Fruth Pharmacy chain – have taken it one step further and have done away entirely with traditional single-ingredient PSE products and replaced them with “meth-resistant” formulations. According to local reports, the state has seen a 30 percent drop in PSE sales since the pharmacies stopped carrying Sudafed and its store-brand generic equivalents. In nearby Tennessee, two counties in a particularly meth-ridden area implemented a similar program and saw a75 percent drop in PSE sales and more than an 85 percent decrease in meth labs.

Nexafed® has been clinically proven by FDA standards to treat nasal congestion as effectively as standard PSE, while also reducing the amount of pseudoephedrine that can be converted during the meth-making process. Impede®, the unique meth-resistant technology in Nexafed, works by trapping the PSE in a thick gel that forms when the medicine tablet is placed in water or other solvents, which is generally how manufacturers extract PSE from cold medications like Sudafed. The product’s unique meth-deterring technology renders it essentially useless for meth producers who get a significantly lower yield of meth from the product to make it worth their time.

“Ultimately, meth-deterrent PSE formulations give peace of mind to the pharmacists who want to make sure effective PSE is in the hands of the consumers who need it, while making it much harder for meth cooks to get their supply of a key meth making ingredient,” said Bob Jones, president of Acura Pharmaceuticals, the makers of Nexafed. “We are thrilled with the success that’s been achieved in Tennessee and West Virginia, but know that more can and should be done by other states and big pharmacy retailers to reduce meth production and make the switch to meth-resistant PSE products.”

While these cold-medications won’t solve the broader meth addiction and abuse problem, data show they are making a difference in reducing illegitimate PSE sales and domestic meth production. This means fewer fires, less toxic waste, lower costs for cleanup and foster care – all desirable outcomes without requiring legislation. For pharmacies, stocking meth-resistant cold medications is a simple way to provide customers with the medicine they have always relied on without requiring them to visit the doctor every time they have a cold. And this switch keeps meth producers looking elsewhere.

Acura Pharmaceuticals provides an unrestricted educational grant to The Meth Project, a large-scale prevention program aimed at reducing meth use through public service messaging, public policy, and community outreach. Visit www.methproject.org for more information and find out how to help Join the Fight Against Meth on Facebook.

Heroin Drug Overdoses Nearly Tripled From 1999 to 2012: CDC
December 3rd, 2014/



Overdose deaths involving heroin nearly tripled from 1999 to 2012, a new government report concludes. Overall, drug overdose deaths more than doubled.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found drug overdose deaths rose from 6.1 per 100,000 population in 1999 to 13.1 in 2012. Between 2011 and 2012, the rate of drug-poisoning deaths involving heroin increased 35 percent, from 1.4 per 100,000 to 1.9.

There were 41,502 drug overdose deaths in 2012. Of these deaths, 16,007 involved opioid painkillers and 5,925 involved heroin, Time reports. The death rate from opioid painkillers declined 5 percent from 2011 to 2012, the first decrease seen in more than a decade, the CDC noted.

The states with the highest rates of drug-poisoning death were West Virginia, Kentucky, New Mexico, Utah and Nevada.

Earlier this year, the CDC reported 46 people die from a painkiller overdose every day. U.S. doctors wrote 259 million prescriptions for painkillers in 2012, the report noted.

In October, the CDC reported the death rate from heroin overdoses doubled from 2010 to 2012. Years of over-prescribing of painkillers led to the increase in heroin deaths, the CDC said.

Deaths from heroin rose from 1 to 2.1 deaths per 100,000 people during that period. Deaths from prescription opioid painkillers declined, from 6 to 5.6 deaths per 100,000. “The rapid rise in heroin overdose deaths follows nearly two decades of increasing drug overdose deaths in the United States, primarily driven by (prescription painkiller) drug overdoses,” the CDC researchers wrote.