The binding can dull the pain in the body, which is helpful when prescribed by a doctor, but dangerous when taken recreationally. Opiates create a euphoria in the body by releasing a flood of neurotransmitters, such as dopamine and serotonin. This creates a high feeling and when the high stops, the person needs more to get the same feeling. This is known as building tolerance and building drug dependence. Building…
Codeine is a short-acting narcotic prescribed by physicians most often used for the treatment of pain relief. It is an opioid Codeine can be highly addictive and provides the user with an overall sense of calm and feelings of pleasure. When codeine is used it enters the brain and causes the release of neurotransmitters that stimulate the reward center of the brain, leaving the user feeling intense feelings of well-being and pleasure. This kind of pleasure can lead to both psychological and physical dependence. Some individuals use it for legitimate medical purposes, but over time develop an addiction problem.…
Opioids are a class of drugs that are intended to be used for treating pain. Common prescription painkillers are hydrocodone, morphine, codeine, oxycodone, and many others. The illegal drug heroin is also classified as an opioid. Opioids, or opiates, are derived from opium. They are chemically associated and combine with opioid receptors on the nerve cells throughout the central nervous system to produce gratifying effects and relieve pain.…
Opioids are a class of drugs that include the illegal drug heroin, a synthetic drug called fentanyl, and pain relievers available legally by prescription, such as oxycodone, hydrocodone, codeine, morphine, and many others. Opioids work by binding to the body’s opiate receptors; highly concentrated in areas of the brain that control pain and emotions. When opiate drugs bind to these receptors, they can drive up dopamine levels in the brain’s reward areas, producing a state of euphoria and relaxation, some people get the urge to use the drug again and again. Kentucky in the past four years has had over 800 overdoses from heroin alone. Boone County has had almost 300 in the past four years.…
There are more deaths that occur for fellow New Yorkers that results from drug overdoses than car crashes, homicides, and suicides all combined. Opioids makes up 80% of the drug overdoes in the city; which include heroin, morphine, oxycodone, hydrocodone and fentanyl. The treatment that works best for opioid addiction is the use of medications; specifically, methadone or buprenorphine. These medications lower the risk of relapse by stopping the strong cravings for opioids, which can occur in people for a long time even after they have stopped taking the drugs (Mabry 2018). Methadone and buprenorphine also block the effects of many opioids (Mabry 2018).…
Opioids are psychoactive substances derived from the opium poppy, or their synthetic analogues. They are natural, semisynthetic or synthetic narcotic drugs used as painkiller such as morphine, meth or methadone, oxycodone, fentanyl, hydrocodone, codeine, hydromorphone and buprenorphine. They are legal only when prescribed. Opioid overdose (OOD) occurs by accident or on purpose. OOD depresses central nervous and respiratory systems leading to drowsiness, slow breathing, pinpoint pupils, bluish lips or fingernails, limping, vomiting, loss of consciousness and death.…
Thank you for taking the time to read my letter and your service to our state and nation. I am a nurse and work every day to help people be well physically and mentally and I can’t help but notice the destructive nature of opioid addiction touching all socio-economic levels of society. I write you to request your help in addressing an ongoing and lethal problem happening all over our state and country. The problem I refer to is the ease of our citizens to attain and abuse powerful and addictive pain medications. I ask that you put forth legislation that would crackdown on “pill mills” and make it harder for doctors to prescribe such potentially damaging medicines.…
My name is Megan Johnston and I am a registered nurse at a local hospital with nine years of critical care experience. During my career at the bedside, I have watched numerous parents, children, and other family members have to make the difficult decision to take their loved one off of life support and watch them die after an opioid drug overdose. To watch how devastating this is for patients and their loved ones is both heart wrenching and disturbing to me as a healthcare professional. The opioid crisis began to spiral in the 1990s when pharmaceutical companies told providers and prescribers that patients would not likely become addicted to opioid pain relievers, and therefore they were prescribed more frequently, which subsequently led to…
What Caused the Opioid Epidemic? Would you be surprised if I told you that the United States had 50% more people die last year due to a drug epidemic than in car accidents? I heard this on a news podcast and was shocked to find this statistic to be true. This drug crisis is the opioid epidemic we are currently facing in our country that last year alone claimed 60,000 lives. This prompted me to ask, why are we having this epidemic?…
America has had an ongoing problem with drug epidemics, we are currently in the middle of a country-wide heroin epidemic. To slow or stop the epidemic we need to look back on our past drug epidemics, specifically the cocaine epidemic, for it is relatively modern. During the cocaine epidemic, America and the people in it did some things well, but also a lot of things bad. The only way for us to move forward is to look back and learn. We need to check ourselves right now for what we have already done in the epidemic and make sure we are not making the same mistakes.…
Dear Andres Salinas, I found your approach to introducing of your paper pretty interesting since you chose to introduce the topic with personal experience. However, I failed to notice your thesis statement. I could not find your thesis statement and I kind confused. Could it be you chose to discuss the medical benefits of marijuana versus those opioids?…
Painkiller is shorthand for prescription painkiller. Other terms are opioid analgesic, opioid painkiller, and opioid pain reliever. A painkiller is an opioid medication approved by the FDA to relieve pain. Other medicinal uses of opioids are to treat cough (antitussive) and diarrhea (antidiarrheal). Physician refers to a medical doctor or Doctor of Osteopathy.…
Opioids have been used in pharmaceutical drugs as a painkiller. Opioids are in medications like morphine, hydrocodone and oxycodone, which have been praised for their effectiveness for patients suffering extreme pain However, there have been downsides to using opioids in drugs. The use of opioids has lead to addictions and to deaths in the United States. After people take opioids as a painkiller, they can become addicted to the drug. This addiction they get can lead them deeper into addiction or even death.…
When someone goes to the doctor because they are in pain doctors give them opioids also called opiates and narcotics which is a type of pain medication. People that take opioids for a long period of time become dependent on them or addicted and in the long run not good for people due to their side effects. Also, the risk of overdose higher with opioids. There need to be stricter regulations for doctors being able to prescribe these kinds of drugs long term due to that many patients that are prescribed these drugs should not be taking them because the abuse them. People can become not necessarily addicted to opioids but rather dependent on them.…
Endorphins ability to relieve stress or pain is possible because of the pentapeptides met-enkephalin and leu-enkephalin. Things that may trigger endorphins are activities including sexual intercourse, laughing, exercising, eating sweet foods and the scent alone of food. (Chemistry Explained…