My dad is addicted to World of Warcraft, HELP?
Question by sydneyanguyen: My dad is addicted to World of Warcraft, HELP?
Ok so I am in Middle school now, and my dad has been playing since I was in third grade. Ever since he started he has been distant from the family, playing 8 hours a day, and never doing anything for me. The only time he actually gets up is when my dad’s girlfriend asks him to, and only when we go eat. The day The Lich King came out, he played it non stop and called in sick for work, while he never takes the day off if it’s my birthday, or summer break, or i have the day off, or any other occasion. It’s like he doesn’t realize he has an actual life, but his life is in the game. I am sick and tired of it! Please help?
Best answer:
Answer by Prophet
Tell him about how you feel.
Answer by gunblade15
Tell him that he is a father now and he has to do his best for his children and screw the video game. Your more important than a video game.
Stop Cocaine Addiction with Drug Rehab Massachusetts. — SAVE a Loved One’s LIFE: 1-877-748-2833 **Get help at Drug Rehab Intervention** Rehabilitation,Center,Addiction,New Jersey Stop Cocaine Addiction with Drug R…
State sees surge in suspected heroin overdose deaths
Drug overdoses now kill more Americans than car crashes. That Centers for Disease Control statistic has hit home recently as the number of suspected heroin overdose deaths in Massachusetts surged over the past four months. At least 185 Bay State …
Read more on The Patriot Ledger
IQ-Boosting Drugs Aim to Help Down Syndrome Kids Learn: Health
An IQ boost of just 10 to 15 points could greatly increase the chance that someone with the syndrome would be able to live independently as an adult, said Brian Skotko, co-director of the Down syndrome program at Massachusetts General Hospital in …
Read more on Businessweek
Medicaid Expansion Spurs States to Fight Fraud, Overpayments
In February, New York's Foundling Hospital was forced to pay $ 250,000 in fines and reimbursements to Medicaid for billing the program before children were admitted to the hospital and after they left. The state has so far recouped $ 3.8 million from …
Read more on Government Technology
my face is swollen?
Question by mandy c: my face is swollen?
it’s healing super slow any other idea besides ice
Best answer:
Answer by Sweet T
Eyes, nose, thumbs, toes-just about any body part can swell up. It happens for lots of different reasons, and the sensations that go along with swelling can be painful, itchy or annoying. And while there are many general remedies for swelling, some body parts require their own special treatments.
Swelling often accompanies injury, for instance, as fluid normally flowing through blood vessels seeps out into the surrounding tissue. That may happen when blood vessels are injured by a bump, by a muscle or ligament tear or by a fracture.
Swelling can also happen slowly, without an injury, as the result of pooled blood in an arm or leg. Through a process called effusion, fluid seeps from the blood vessels into tissue. It’s this kind of swelling that occurs when you notice your hands puffing up while you walk or if your feet get a shoe size bigger when you’ve been standing around for a long time. (Because varicose veins impede the return of blood to the heart via the veins, they can cause this kind of swelling.)
Hives, welts and the itchy bumps caused by mosquitoes and other bloodsucking parasites are other examples of swelling. So are the stuffy, runny nose and scratchy, puffy eyes that accompany hay fever.
“The more a body part swells, the more blood circulation is slowed. And poor blood circulation slows healing,” says Clayton Holmes, an athletic trainer and assistant professor of physical therapy at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio. For serious injuries, you’ll want to see the doctor and follow his recommendations. But here are some all-purpose ways to keep swelling down.
When to See the Doctor
Many injuries that cause swelling deserve a doctor’s prompt attention. That’s because ligament or muscle tear, fractures or cartilage damage may be hiding under all that puffiness.
If you think you might have an ankle, foot or leg fracture, don’t try to remove your shoe. Let the doctor do that. First-aid treatment is different for each kind of fracture, but generally you want to keep the limb from moving around until the doctor can treat it.
Also, if swelling is the result of an insect bite or sting and is accompanied by severe reactions such as chest tightness, dizziness or fainting, seek medical help at once. These are signs of potentially deadly anaphylactic shock.
Try an over-the-counter antihistamine. These drugs help counter-act the swelling caused by insect stings and many kinds of allergic reactions, says Thomas Platts-Mills, M.D., Ph.D., head of the Division of Allergy and Clinical Immunology at the University of Virginia Health Sciences Center in Charlottesville. Antihistamines are contained in some liquid medications, but Dr. Platts-Mills recommends the faster-acting chewable tablet. “Take the dosage suggested on the box as soon as you are stung,” he says. (That way, the drug gets into your system quickly.) Take the antihistamine at recommended intervals as long as the swelling continues. Note: Antihistamines are useless for injury-related swelling.
Remember RICE. Not the long-grain variety but a proven first-aid method for injured ankles, knees and elbows: rest, ice, compression and elevation. “The sooner you do all four, the better,” says Holmes.
If you want to reduce swelling in a leg, for instance, do RICE in this order. Wet a four- to six-inch-wide elastic bandage in ice water. Firmly wrap it a few times around the injured ankle or knee, providing compression, then apply two quart-size plastic bags of crushed ice, so they completely surround the joint. Continue wrapping, using the bandage to hold the ice in place. Leave the ice on for no longer than 20 minutes. Take off the ice and rewrap the injury. Wait an hour before you ice again.
While you’re icing, elevate the injured part above the level of your heart.
Rest the injured part by immobilizing it. If it’s an ankle or knee that’s hurt, don’t try to hobble around. Get some assistance when you walk, or else use crutches.
Step in place. Standing motionless for long periods of time may cause swelling. That’s because up to a quart of blood pools in your legs and feet, and fluid may seep out of blood vessels into tissue. That not only makes your legs feel like lead, it makes your feet a size bigger. So walk in place, lifting your knees and pointing your toes downward. That helps your muscles pump blood upward. If you must stand still, keep your knees slightly flexed. Don’t lock them, experts say.
Stay active after exercise. If you stop suddenly after hard exercise, blood can pool in your legs, resulting in swelling and sometimes low blood pressure as well. Instead of stopping abruptly after a run or swim, cool down with lighter activity for ten minutes or so. That keeps your circulation going but at a less intense pace, suggests John Duncan, Ph.D., associate director of the Exercise Physiology Department at the Cooper Institute for Aerobics Research in Dallas. This gradual slowdown is especially important for people taking heart medications such as beta blockers.
Bend and pump. Swinging your arms while you walk is a good way to loosen up, but the centrifugal force it creates can make blood pool in your hands, causing swelling. “Try bending your arms 90 degrees at the elbows, and use them as pistons,” suggests Dr. Duncan. “Raise them up higher than you normally would and swing with the cadence of your walking gait.” While you’re doing that, keep your hands loosely open. Although you can occasionally clench your hands to squeeze out fluid, continual clenching interferes with the flow of fluid through the arm and will make your lower arm swell.
Keep a loose grip on your bike. Do your lower arms swell when you’re bicycling? Unless you’re barreling down some potholed road, you shouldn’t have to grip the handlebars of your bike so tightly that you cut off circulation in your arms. But that’s exactly what some people do, even while they’re riding stationary bicycles indoors, Dr. Duncan says. “A healthy person might not notice it, but someone who already has circulation problems will see his lower arms swelling,” he says. So keep a loose grip, he suggests, and shift from the upper to lower bars occasionally. Or simply move your hands. Padded gloves can help, too.
Stuck Ring? Dental Floss to the Rescue!
A ring may be a symbol of wedded bliss, but it can pose real danger when it’s stuck on a swelling finger. Because it can cut off blood circulation just as surely as a tourniquet, that band of gold has got to come off–the sooner, the better.
If your knuckle has swollen and is already too big to slip the ring over, try this trick using dental floss. (Better yet, use waxed dental tape.) Used by emergency medical technicians, the technique is recommended by John C. Johnson, M.D., past president of the American College of Emergency Physicans and director of Emergency Medical Services at Porter Memorial Hospital in Valparaiso, Indiana.
Take a long piece of floss (two to three feet is not too long). Starting at the tip of the finger, closely wrap the floss around the finger, spiraling down toward the ring. Keep the encirclements 1/8 inch apart or less. When you get to the ring, slip the end of the floss under the ring and pull it toward your palm. Lift that end of the floss over the top of the ring and pull up toward the tip of your finger. As the floss unwinds, it will ease the ring up and off the finger.
To make this even easier, grease the floss-wrapped finger with petroleum jelly before you remove the ring.
Answer by nol_mar
Might be a bad tooth.
Mount Regis Center – Drug and Alcohol Rehab and Detox in Virginia — Mount Regis is a 25 bed fully accredited, licensed drug and alcohol treatment center in Salem, Virginia. We offer state-of-the-art medically monitored detox,…
US Sen. Cardin gives thoughts on US, Cecil issues
Cardin said federal funding may be available to Cecil County or a third-party organization to start an in-patient drug treatment center in the county. After last year's public health study found that Cecil County had the highest overdose death rate per …
Read more on Cecil Whig
Medicaid funding will help lower crime
As a citizen of Virginia, I also want lawmakers to make smart use of taxpayer dollars. For these reasons and more, I am … Approximately 98,000 parents would gain coverage in Virginia, enabling them to gain access to drug and alcohol screening and …
Read more on Daily Press
Drug laws in other countries?
Question by Erica: Drug laws in other countries?
I read somewhere that the reason the U.S. has a big drug problem is because we treat drug addiction as a crime, while other countries have less drug problems because they treat drug addiction like an illness. I’m a little confused and curious about this.
Does that mean that those countries don’t punish people for drug use? They’re free to use drug until they become addicted? And what about drug dealers, is providing the drugs a crime, even though doing the drug isn’t a crime?
I’m curious about this method but I don’t really get it. Can anyone help me understand this?
Best answer:
Answer by Chuck
our drug laws are mild compared to other countries. What gets you a 3 – 5 year sentence here can get you the death penalty somewhere else.
Answer by Mugwumps
The US and UK both have the strictest drug laws in the west and the worst drug problems. Some European Countries no longer treat certain drug possession as a crime, notably Portugal who have seen positive results because of their policy change. Most will not criminalise you for possession, the ones which do tend to have the worst problems. I think Sweden treats drug users medically, instead of going to jail they are put into rehab, this approach is only useful to drug addicts (most drug users are NOT addicts) who want to give up. I don’t really get criminalisation of people for drug use, it has been shown to be a massive failure, prisons are rife with drugs, so criminalising these people just makes the issue worse.
Kansas Drug Rehab Detox | 877 677 4695 | Kansas Substance Abuse Treatment — Kansas Drug Rehab Detox | 877-677-4695 | Kansas Substance Abuse Treatment http://alcoholdrugrehabusa.blogspot.com Alcohol detoxification Alcohol Rehab Alcoho…
Family trauma haunts many addicts
First trial is free from the pushers.” Headspace diagnosis clinician Mark Powell told the hearing there was anecdotal evidence of a link between broken families and substance abuse. He said treatment and intervention programs for Aborigines grappling …
Read more on Warrnambool Standard
HPMH: New substance abuse treatment department kicks off today
The agency, which serves 20 counties in northwest Kansas, has announced services to treat individuals and their families suffering from substance abuse disorders. According to HPMH outpatient therapist Jennifer Colby, licensed specialist in clinical …
Read more on hays Post
Legalizing marijuana will not improve our country
Dr. Kevin Sabet served in the Obama administration as senior advisor at the White House office of National Drug Control Policy. He is now director of the Drug Policy Institute at … Dr. Christian Thurstone, society president and youth addiction …
Read more on Herald & Review
Protecting and improving the lives of detainees – Human Rights Council
And yet the health problems arising from the spread of infectious diseases (such as tuberculosis and HIV), drug addiction and the increased prevalence of mental illnesses are now more pressing than ever. It is true that the ICRC has also noted an …
Read more on ICRC (press release)
Do drug addicts tend to be sexually active?
Question by citywoman: Do drug addicts tend to be sexually active?
I read somewhere that men that are drug addicts and alcoholics have unprotected sex with other girls. Even if they have a girlfriend that doesn’t use drugs they cheat on her.
Best answer:
Answer by Serina
You can’t group them all together.
Stop being stereotypical.
Some are, some aren’t. That’s that.
Answer by ChrisE
not all guys are the same, if u r not married u should use protection
Monday Viewpoints: The US Surgeon General's report on smoking
My medical colleagues across the country and I have devoted much of our medical practices to treating the horrible human suffering and lingering deaths caused by cigarette smoking. … We must prevent the problem at its source: tobacco. According …
Read more on Bethany Beach Wave
Editorial: County Republicans should support Medicaid plan
Not a week goes by that the consequences of inadequate treatment don't make headlines in New Hampshire: crime fueled by drug addiction; recidivism among prison inmates who get no help with the addictions that drove them to crime in the first place …
Read more on Concord Monitor
Unlikely witnesses crucial to case against S.F. police
A recovering heroin addict – caught trying to sell more than a pound of marijuana in Golden Gate Park – accused San Francisco narcotics officers of enlisting her to sell drugs they had seized as evidence. No one believed Daisy Bram's claims back in …
Read more on San Francisco Chronicle
Residential Drug Rehab To Land In Woodland
Despite heavy neighborhood opposition, a residential rehab and treatment center for professional women who are suffering from prescription drug addiction has received the green light. The four-bedroom facility, proposed off Trull Road near the Swiss …
Read more on The Mountain Jackpot
Do you know of any free ebooks about drugs, drug and alcohol treatment, alcoholism,?
Question by Breezy: Do you know of any free ebooks about drugs, drug and alcohol treatment, alcoholism,?
I need read a book and do a review for a class about life, society and drugs. I would like an e-book so I can read it anywhere. I could also read one that costs no more than $ 10.
Have you read any good books that talk about drugs, or drug use or abuse?
Best answer:
Answer by WV_Nomad
I use to work at a treatment facility. There is a wide range of infomation on that topic and what is the best treatment. You could always a and AA/NA book to understand the addiction or go to an open meeting. There are many programs that doesn’t agree with AA/NA, due to reasons, and a major one would be that AA/NA views the addiction as a disease, and the religious views addiction as a behavior. A lot of college book stores has books on that topic and if their used it would be cheaper to buy. A good book, but hard to understand because it’s a Masters degree level, but it does give different views about alcoholism “Alcoholism and the Family….A Guide to Treatment and Prevention”…by Ann Lawson and Gary Lawson. If you decide to get it, try reading through it a little, cause there are big words in it that could make the book boring.
Drug Treatment Centers in Burbank IL | Call 800-281-9728 For HELP — Drug Treatment Centers in Burbank IL | Call 800-281-9728 For HELP In choosing Drug Treatment Centers in Burbank, IL, you have to make sure that they offer gr…
Lack of NY law on medical marijuana vexes parents seeking help for children's …
… get access to that state's medical marijuana program. Parents such as Conte from across New York are turning elsewhere, especially to Colorado, so that their children who suffer from rare disorders can obtain an oil-based marijuana treatment …
Read more on Buffalo News
Narconon drug rehab – a sister goes public today about tragic death
It is not uncommon for drug addicts attending a Narconon program to have a compromised liver from alcoholism, liver disease, and Hepatitis C. High, toxic doses of NIACIN are “like pouring gasoline on a fire,” said one physician recently. Even though …
Read more on Examiner.com
MAINE COMPASS: Criminal justice system should focus on rehabilitation, not …
The so-called War on Drugs and a proliferation of “tough on crime” policies have made ours the largest criminal justice system in the world. Even here in Maine, more than 10,000 people are under some form … This includes greater access to treatment …
Read more on Morning Sentinel
History of mental illness?
Question by Go Herd: History of mental illness?
I’m writing a paper on the history of mental illness and how it has come to be accepted in society today. I’ve looked all night for sources through my university’s library website but all that I can come up with are abstracts and “unavailable” documents. Does anyone know where I can go to find reliable research sources?
Thanks in advance!
Best answer:
Answer by simple !!! but cute
Our earliest explanation of what we now refer to as psychopathology involved the possession by evil spirits and demons. Many believed, even as late as the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries that the bizarre behavior associated with mental illness could only be an act of the devil himself. To remedy this, many individuals suffering from mental illness were tortured in an attempt to drive out the demon. Most people know of the witch trials where many women were brutally murdered due to a false belief of possession. When the torturous methods failed to return the person to sanity, they were typically deemed eternally possessed and were executed.
1600s
Native American shamans, or medicine men, summoned supernatural powers to treat the mentally ill, incorporating rituals of atonement and purification.
1692
Witchcraft and demonic possession were common explanations for mental illness. The Salem witchcraft trials sentenced nineteen people to hanging.
1724
Puritan clergyman, Cotton Mather (1663-1728), broke with superstition by advancing physical explanations for mental illnesses.
1812
Benjamin Rush (1745-1813) became one of the earliest advocates of humane treatment for the mentally ill with the publication of Medical Inquiries and Observations Upon Diseases of the Mind, the first American textbook of psychiatry.
1843
There were approximately 24 hospitals–totaling only 2,561 beds–available for treating mental illness in the United States.
1908
Manic depressive Clifford Beers (1876-1943) wrote The Mind That Found Itself, an account of his experience as a mental patient which vividly describes the cruelty that was the norm of institutional care. Beers went on to found the National Committee for Mental Hygiene, predecessor to today’s National Mental Health Association.
1909
Sigmund Freud visited America and lectured on psychoanalysis at Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts.
1910
Emil Kraepelin first describes Alzheimer’s Disease.
1918
The American Psychoanalytic Association ruled that only individuals who have completed medical school and a psychiatric residency can become candidates for psychoanalytic training.
1920
Harry Stack Sullivan’s ward for schizophrenic patients at Sheppard-Pratt Hospital demonstrates the impact of a therapeutic milieu when patients are able to be returned to the community.
1930s
Psychiatrists began to inject insulin to induce shock and temporary coma as a treatment for schizophrenia.
1936
Egas Moniz published an account of the first human frontal lobotomy. Between 1936 and the mid-1950s, an estimated twenty thousand of these surgical procedures were performed on American mental patients.
1940s
Electrotherapy (applying electric current to the brain) was first used in American hospitals to treat mental illnesses.
1947
Fountain House in NYC begins psychiatric rehabilitation for mentally ill persons.
1952
The first conventional antipsychotic drug, chlorpromazine, was introduced to treat patients with schizophrenia and other major mental disorders.
1960s
Conventional antipsychotic drugs, such as haloperidol, were first used to control outward (“positive”) symptoms of psychosis, bringing a significant measure of calm and order to previously noisy and chaotic psychiatric wards.
Lithium revolutionized the treatment of manic depression.
1962
422,000 individuals were hospitalized for psychiatric care in the United States.
1970
Mass deinstitutionalization began. Patients and their families were left to their own resources due to lack of outpatient programs for rehabilitation and reintegration back into society.
1980
Rise of managed care–short-stay hospitalization with community treatment became the standard of care for mental illness.
Carol Anderson and Gerald Hogarty publish treatment model of family psychoeducation in schizophrenia – reduces relapse by over 50%.
1989
The first serotonin dopamine antagonist was introduced for patients with treatment resistant/intolerant schizophrenia.
1990
Brain imaging is used to learn more about the development of major mental illnesses.
1994
The 1st first-line of the atypical antipsychotic drugs, is introduced. It is the 1st new first-line antipsychotic drug in almost 20 years.
1997
Researchers identify genetic links to polar disorder, suggesting that the disease is inherited.
ANAHEIM LIGHTHOUSE REHABILITATION: Drug and Alcohol Rehab Center in Anaheim California — Subscribe!!! DRUG AND ALCOHOL TREATMENT: Los Angeles Drug Rehab Centers Substance abuse and detoxification treatment center that is locat. Alcoholism Recover…
16th Annual L'Oréal-UNESCO for Women in Science Awards
Since 1998 the program has recognized more than 2,000 women around the globe (82 Laureates, including two who later won the Nobel Prize, and 1,920 Fellows). Awardees honored for major scientific advancements that are helping … Her findings led the …
Read more on SYS-CON Media (press release)
BioMmune Announces Results of Initial UBC Work Program
"Furthermore, in several cases, we have identified the unique chemical structures of potential drug leads and are in the process of protecting intellectual property related to these new chemical entities. Thus, we anticipate the development of a number …
Read more on SYS-CON Media (press release)
Pregnant and addicted Pt. 2: Inside the LES center giving struggling moms new …
NEW YORK (PIX11) – Su Casa, part of the Lower Eastside Service Center, is a private, not for profit operating, in part, through a contract with the New York State Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services. In recent years, the center even began …
Read more on New York’s PIX11 / WPIX-TV
Company proposes Darryl Strawberry center for drug and alcohol abuse
The St. Louis center would offer programs including 28-day detox and rehabilitation for drug and alcohol addiction and treatments for athletes in recovery. The center would also work with athletes experiencing long-term symptoms from concussions.
Read more on STLtoday.com