If you're making enough to put food on your table, then consider yourself fortunate. Without exaggeration, there are millions going to bed tonight starving...
Random Xpressions
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If you're making enough to put food on your table, then consider yourself fortunate. Without exaggeration, there are millions going to bed tonight starving...
Random Xpressions
“Because there is no love you can throw on them, no hug big enough that will change the power of that drug; it is just beyond imagination how controlling and destructive it is.”
Patricia Mehrmann in Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company that Addicted America by Beth Macy
Part Three: “A Broken System”
Chapter Eleven: Hope on a Spreadsheet
Maybe one day I’ll hone my skills enough to take commissions but the prices will just be ‘inquire in DMs’ so sb messages me and I ask them to send me a picture of a seal and depending on how much I like that picture determines how much art they get
A BROKEN SYSTEM
Play → A BROKEN SYSTEM
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“Only one in ten addicted Americans gets any treatment at all for [their] sustande use disorder—which is why there’s such a push for outpatient MAT and, increasingly, programs that divert the addicted from jail to treatment.”
Beth Macy, Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company that Addicted America
Part Three: “A Broken System”
Chapter Thirteen: Outcasts and Inroads
“The more we talk about the [opioid] epidemic as an individual disease phenomenon or a moral failing, the easier it is to obfuscate and ignore the social and economic conditions that predispose certain individuals to addiction.”
David Avruch, in Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company that Addicted America by Beth Macy
Part Three: “A Broken System”
Chapter Thirteen: Outcasts and Inroads
“While [Dr. Marc] Fishman believed buprenorphine, methadone, and naltrexone were all imperfect solutions, they remain, scientifically speaking, the best death-prevention tools in the box … The naysayers would be more open to MAT if its proponents would more openly acknowledge the drawbacks of maintenance drugs—significant relapse rates when patients stop treatment, for instance—instead of portraying them as a kind of perfect chemical fix, Fishman argued.”
Beth Macy, Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company that Addicted America
Part Three: “A Broken System”
Chapter Thirteen: Outcasts and Inroads
“If you want to keep people away from drugs and drug-related crime, you have to have rewarding activities. It’s work. It’s okay. It’s an emphasis on the kinds of activities and relationships that people build their lives around. If we don’t do something to rebuild these communities, I don’t see this current drug configuration ebbing in the way that drug waves of the past historically have.”
Nancy D. Campbell, in Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company that Addicted America by Beth Macy
Part Three: “A Broken System”
Chapter Thirteen: Outcasts and Inroads