Lmao ...... Where do u guys get this stuff from ....
Op if u need any help with the book, whatever it is .... Let us know... Opinions or whatever..... I support u man u seem like a great guy I really liked ur post when that d!ckhead emailed dsm
definately would get the book
I would never take any methadone or any other pills at that rehab or treatment facility... no matter who it is for. It just solidifies their perspective that you have drug problems and need help. I would just say, I don't want anything to do with that stuff... keep it away from me. It could have been a test too.
Methadone is NOT and "opiate blocker"....it is an opiate agonist
Narcan or Naloxone is an "opiate blocker"....also referred to as a semisynthetic opiate-receptor antagonist.
Description
NOTE: Methadone is a schedule C-II controlled substance. Practitioners who use methadone for the treatment of opiate dependence must register and comply with the Narcotic Addict Treatment Act (NATA) [21USC 823(g)]. As of January 1, 2008, manufacturers of methadone hydrochloride tablets 40 mg (dispersible) have voluntarily agreed to distribute this formulation only to hospitals and facilities authorized for detoxification and maintenance treatment of opioid addiction.
Description: Methadone is a potent synthetic opiate agonist of the phenylheptylamine class and is structurally unrelated to morphine. Methadone is a racemic mixture; the l-isomer is responsible for the drug's analgesic effects. The d-isomer exhibits significantly less analgesic action and lacks respiratory depression activity and addiction liability, but it does have antitussive effects. Methadone is the most frequently used agent in medically supervised opiate withdrawal and maintenance programs. Federal, state, and local guidelines strictly regulate methadone treatment of opiate dependence. Effective methadone treatment requires individualized and comprehensive psychosocial support and access to medical and rehabilitative services. Heroin-dependent individuals have better outcomes when they are maintained on methadone than when they are not treated at all, acutely detoxified and released, expelled from treatment programs or when the treatment program is closed. A study by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), the Drug Treatment Outcome Study (DATOS), found that in those patients treated by outpatient methadone centers, weekly heroin use decreased 69%, cocaine use decreased by 48%, illegal activity decreased by 52%, and full time work increased by 24%.
Last edited by Bull_Nuts; 10-10-2009 at 02:19 PM.
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