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Tag: Addiction

  • Victoria Siegel: Was She A Victim of Severe Bullying On the Day She Died?

    Victoria Siegel, the daughter of Queen of Versailles stars David and Jackie Siegel, was just 18 when she died on Saturday. Now the family’s attorney says she may received some cruel text messages on the morning she died.

    Michael Marder, the Siegel’s attorney, issued a statement via Jackie Siegel’s Facebook account.

    In it, he talks about the purported actions of an ex-girlfriend of the boyfriend of Victoria Siegel.

    “The ex-girlfriend of Victoria’s boyfriend used his phone to send cruel and hateful text messages using the boyfriend’s phone,” Marder said in the statement. “These messages were sent early on the morning of Victoria’s death. These messages were clearly intended to hurt Victoria and while we cannot be sure may have affected her emotional state at a time when she was emotionally vulnerable.”

    The latest statement from Siegel Family Attorney & Official Spokesperson, Michael Marder is the following:The…

    Posted by Jacqueline Siegel on Tuesday, June 9, 2015

    The teenager was alone when she received the alleged text messages and when she died. Her family was away at a wedding.

    Victoria Siegel was battling an addiction to prescription medication.

    Do you think these text messages may have prompted Victoria Siegel to take more drugs than her system could handle?

    No cause of death has been determined. Toxicology reports from Victoria Siegel’s autopsy could take several weeks.

    Victoria Siegel was laid to rest on Tuesday.

  • Scott Disick: Will He Marry Kourtney Kardashian?

    Scott Disick spoke recently with People magazine about the birth of new son Reign and his children Mason, who is five and Penelope, who is two. He also dished about the fact that he and Kourtney Kardashian still haven’t taken that proverbial walk down the aisle. The Keeping Up With the Kardashians star’s take on the subject might surprise some.

    “If it’s not broke don’t fix it –we’re happy the way it is,” he said. “I don’t even think we’ll have time to get married at the rate that we’re popping out kids.”

    Scott Disick was ‘taking a break’ from his daddy duties in Las Vegas when he spoke with People. He was hosting a party at Las Vegas’s 1 OAK, where he reportedly abstained from drinking.

    Strangely enough, Disick admitted to being more into fatherhood than into becoming a husband–at the moment anyway. He talked about the recent milestones in his new son’s life. Reign is just five weeks old.

    “There’s always so much in the beginning when they’re that little. Every day is such a big milestone, but this is my third time so it’s just kind of a charm,” he said.

    “You know it by now; the first one was scary, the second one was less scary, and the third one you’re like, I get it, I got a whole team over here,” he added.

    Scott Disick also shared how welcoming both Mason and Penelope were when he and Kourtney brought Reign home from the hospital.

    “I really thought the other two would have been a drop jealous and truthfully they’re so accommodating and welcoming. I don’t think I could have been that way if I had a sibling,” he said.

    “I cannot get over how much the other two have showed affection to the baby.”

    Do you find it a bit odd that Scott Disick would admit he’s more into fatherhood than into getting married? Doesn’t that come across as a bit of a diss to Kourtney Kardashian–the woman who has borne him three children?

    And how about the fact that he was getting a break from fatherhood? Is he the one who gave birth just five weeks ago?

    Fans have long been surprised that Kourtney Kardashian has put up with Scott Disick for as long as she has. Hollywood Life reports she kicked him out of their home just a couple of days after Reign was born because he was drinking and partying with lingerie models. They add that he is working with his therapist to get a grip on his drinking addiction.

    Can you figure out what it is about Scott Disick that keeps Kourtney Kardashian hanging on?

  • Google Glass Addiction Is Apparently a Thing Now, Leads to Involuntary Temple Tapping

    Google Glass Addiction Is Apparently a Thing Now, Leads to Involuntary Temple Tapping

    First, they were persecuted. Then, they were addicted.

    Yes, it appears that full-blown dependency is the next great tribulation of the Google Glass superuser. We now have a reported case of Google Glass addiction in the books.

    The case comes from a study published in the journal Addictive Behaviors, where a man is said to have the first case of “internet addiction disorder involving the problematic use of Google Glass.”

    According to researchers, the man – who was being treated at the Navy’s Substance Abuse and Recovery Program – displayed alarming behavior when deprived of his beloved Google Glass. He’d been using the wearable tech for upwards of 18 hours a day.

    “The patient exhibited a notable, nearly involuntary movement of the right hand up to his temple area and tapping it with his forefinger. He reported that if he had been prevented from wearing the device while at work, he would become extremely irritable and argumentative,” says the study.

    According to the the report, the subject had “a history of a mood disorder most consistent with a substance induced hypomania overlaying a depressive disorder, anxiety disorder with characteristics of social phobia and obsessive compulsive disorder, and severe alcohol and tobacco use disorders.” Doctors originally thought that the 31-year-old man’s withdrawl symptoms were entirely due to alcohol – but that wasn’t the whole story.

    According to NBC News, the “withdrawal symptoms from Glass were much worse than withdrawing from alcohol.”

    The story has a happy ending, I guess. After 35 days of treatment, the man “noted a reduction in irritability, reduction in motor movements to his temple to turn on the device, and improvements in his short-term memory and clarity of thought processes.”

    Apparently he still has dreams about wearing Glass.

    Image via Google Glass, YouTube

  • Zac Efron Opens Up About Addiction Issues

    Zac Efron Opens Up About Addiction Issues

    Zac Efron is one of Hollywood’s most handsome hunks!

    He’s always been a picture-perfect, camera-friendly guy. However, beneath the surface, he’s battled a serious issue – addiction.

    The 26-year-old actor was reportedly addicted to Ecstasy (MDMA) and cocaine. In April of 2013, the Awkward Moment star shocked fans when he entered rehab to overcome addiction.

    Now, he’s speaking out about the dark moments he’s experienced during the past couple years.

    According to TMZ, the famed Hair Spray star appeared on NBC’s new reality show, Running Wild with Bear Grylls, where he opened up about his battle with addiction.

    He gave a detailed account about the fast life he was living and how quickly he rose to stardom. “It was just so quick — it was shocking,” Efron said about becoming a well-known star after his breakout role in Disney’s High School Musical.

    He also discussed the challenges he’s faced with his career. Surprisingly, his hectic, demanding work schedule wasn’t the hard part. The social aspects attributed to his confusion and the downward spiral.

    “The challenging part was never the work, that was never it. It was sort of the in-between work — the social aspects outside of it; everywhere you go, and it can be confusing and pretty soon you need a social lubricant.”

    Efron revealed how quickly the social aspects of fame and fortune began to consume many facets of his life. “Once it became that, it got to the point where I was caring less about the work and waiting more for the weekend where I couldn’t wait to go out and let loose and have fun,” he admitted. “But when Monday and Tuesday were difficult to get through, I thought, ‘This is bad.’”

    Fortunately, he’s doing much better now. The Neighbors actor is finally comfortable in his own skin.

    “I just really never again want to take anything from the outside in to feel comfortable in my present skin, and that takes a lot of work,” he said. “It’s just meditation and stopping and slowing down your brain.”

    Image via Zac Efron, Facebook

  • Powdered Alcohol Not Approved by Feds

    Powdered Alcohol Not Approved by Feds

    It was previously reported that powdered alcohol, or Palcohol, had been approved by the U.S. Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau. Now the federal government said Monday that the label approval was done in “error.”

    The approval was granted on April 8, though has since been rescinded. “TTB did approve labels for Palcohol,” the Bureau said in a statement. “Those label approvals were issued in error and have since been surrendered.”

    Lipsmark, the company that produces Palcohol said in their own statement that “there seemed to be a discrepancy on our fill level, how much powder is in the bag. This doesn’t mean that Palcohol isn’t approved. It just means that these labels aren’t approved. We will re-submit labels.” Palcohol can be mixed with water to create an intoxicating beverage, and can also be sprinkled on food after it’s cooked.

    The creator of “Pal,” Mark Phillips, asks, “What’s worse than going to a concert, sporting event, etc. and having to pay $10, $15, $20 for a mixed drink with tax and tip. Are you kidding me?! Take Palcohol into the venue and enjoy a mixed drink for a fraction of the cost.” Though the TTB likely sees the product as a potential harbinger of a public health cataclysm.

    Palcohol’s site originally explained the potential of misuse of the product, in a manner surely to turn off substance abusers everywhere – “Let’s talk about the elephant in the room….snorting Palcohol. Yes, you can snort it. And you’ll get drunk almost instantly because the alcohol will be absorbed so quickly in your nose. Good idea? No. It will mess you up. Use Palcohol responsibly.”

    Phillips had initially been attempting to keep his invention under the radar, though was recently prompted to adjust some of the wording on his website. “We are excited by the approval of our powdered alcohol product, Palcohol. However, we were caught off guard with the release of some of our labels by the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB). As a result, people visited this website that we thought was under the radar because we had not made a formal announcement of Palcohol.”

    Image via Facebook

  • E-Cigarettes May Face Some Bad News

    A new study in the Journal of the American Medical Association: Internal Medicine may be bad news for e-cigarette manufacturers and marketers. One of the big selling points for e-digs has been that they are supposed to help you quit smoking. But, according to the new study, they do nothing of the sort.

    The report states:

    “A longitudinal, international study found that, although 85% of smokers who used e-cigarettes reported using them to quit, e-cigarette users did not quit more frequently than nonusers.”

    In fact, the news is even worse than that:

    “One randomized trial comparing e-cigarettes with and without nicotine with a nicotine patch found no differences in 6-month quit rates. Among US quit line callers, e-cigarette users were less likely to have quit at 7 months than nonusers.”

    Use of e-cigarettes, or “vaping” – a reference to the nicotine vapor emitted by the product rather than smoke – is not currently regulated by the Federal government, though that is going to change soon.

    “I agree with [the study’s authors] that sellers of e-cigarettes should not be able to advertise them as smoking cessation devices without sufficient evidence that they are effective for this indication,” Michael Katz, editor of the Journal, wrote.

    Another study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association: Pediatrics says that kids and teens who use e-cigarettes are actually more likely to be smokers.

    “Use of e-cigarettes was associated with higher odds of ever or current cigarette smoking, higher odds of established smoking, higher odds of planning to quit smoking among current smokers, and, among experimenters, lower odds of abstinence from conventional cigarettes. Use of e-cigarettes does not discourage, and may encourage, conventional cigarette use among US adolescents.”

    They went on to show that current e-cigarette use was positively associated with later smoking cigarettes.

    Image via YouTube

  • Amanda Bynes Looks Healthy, Happy at Fashion School Event

    Amanda Bynes looked happy and healthy when she appeared at an event on Friday held at her school, the Fashion Institute of Design & Merchandising in L.A. She posed for photos with her parents as they checked out the projects she spent a semester creating. Bynes studies fashion at the school.

    “Debut showcases the work of students in the advanced program. Everyone from current students to industry professionals attends,” Sydney Taylor, also a student at the school, said. “Amanda looked beautiful and is so sweet. She was being very discreet about being there but smilingly hugged anyone who asked to meet her.”

    “Amanda looks like she’s getting back to normal,” a guest at the event remarked. “She looked good and was being friendly.”

    Amanda Bynes seemed proud of her accomplishments at the design institute and likely of her huge strides toward becoming healthier in both body and mind. She shared some photos of her big day via Twitter.

    This next picture Bynes tweeted is of her with her mom, who holds an indefinite conservatorship over the actress. It definitely appears like she took very necessary measures, however–ones that ultimately saved her daughter’s life.

    It is wonderful to see how far Amanda Bynes has come since her days of appearing front and center in the tabloid news. Mental illness and addiction are serious illnesses that can prove deadly if not treated with both therapy and medication. Thankfully Bynes received–and continues to receive–both, and obviously is working on creating a new life for herself in the world of fashion design.

    She is “very happy to reestablish the loving relationship with her family that she once shared,” an attorney for her mother said following her release from her inpatient treatment facility a few months ago.

    Image via YouTube

  • Lea Michele Says Cory Was Not His Addiction

    Lea Michele continues to open up about the loss of her love — Cory Monteith — who lost a battle with addiction in July.

    The 27-year-old Glee star shared more on her relationship with Monteith and stresses that her boyfriend was much more than his struggles.

    “I only have happy memories of Cory. He was not his addiction – unfortunately, it won,” she said in the April 2014 cover story for Seventeen Magazine. “But that wasn’t who he was. Cory made me feel like a queen every day. From the minute he said, ‘I’m your boyfriend,’ I loved every day, and I thank him for being the best boyfriend and making me feel so beautiful.”

    On a Good Morning America Wednesday, Michele told George Stephanopoulos she couldn’t have made it through her grief without the support of friends and family.

    “I’m really very, very, very thankful for all the amazing people I have in my life,” Michele said. “I know that sounds like something everyone says, but honestly, my friends and my family, they got me through this and really, really have been there for me and I couldn’t have done it without them.”

    The 27-year-old actress — who just released her first solo studio album Louder — took the opportunity to pour out her heart and her grief into the album.

    “I set out to make a really pop-heavy album that was fun and empowering, but then I found myself picking and writing these songs that were very emotional and dramatic,” Michele said. “Louder has songs that express extreme love and some pain. I look at it and think, That was my year. I didn’t record any songs that I didn’t completely relate to.”

    One of the songs on the album — If You Say So — tells the story of her final conversation with Monteith before his death that is just heartbreaking.

    Image via Twitter, Sarah Potempo

  • Lea Michele Only Has Happy Memories of Cory

    Popular Glee actress Lea Michele does not want her late boyfriend, Cory Monteith, to be defined by the addiction that ultimately claimed his life. In a recent interview with Seventeen magazine, Michele spoke about Cory’s unique ability to make her feel special.

    “I only have happy memories of Cory. He was not his addiction – unfortunately, it won. But that wasn’t who he was. Cory made me feel like a queen every day. From the minute he said, ‘I’m your boyfriend,’ I loved every day, and I thank him for being the best boyfriend and making me feel so beautiful,” Michele shared.

    In the aftermath of the public heartbreak and devastation at losing 31-year-old Monteith, Michele has thrown herself into her work. The talented singer has just released an album composed of tracks to honor her late boyfriend. Michele spoke with a representative from Seventeen prior to the album’s release where she explained the desire to continue her own unique journey while still keeping the memory of Cory alive.

    “My album is coming out on March 4th—which is bizarre, like it’s meant to be. Just think about it: we’re going to “March fo(u)rth.” We’re going to march forth like a Cannonball. I try my best to march forth and live my life as best as I can for me. I also feel an incredible, happy responsibility to keep the memory and light of [Cory, who] was the most amazing person. I’m so happy to make it my journey now to continue on and live my life as best as I can,” Michele said.

    Image Via Wikimedia Commons And Courtesy of Mike Ownby

  • New Painkiller Zohydro: What Parents And Patients Need To Know

    Painkiller junkies who’ve diligently done research are anxiously awaiting the arrival of a pill called Zohydro.

    Meanwhile, a well-meaning coalition of health professionals is also anticipating – the imminent demise of such existing abusers and legitimate patients alike. They are trying their hardest to prevent such tragedy from unfolding right up until the last minute, as the drug is set to be released as soon as March.

    “In the midst of a severe drug epidemic fueled by overprescribing of opioids, the very last thing the country needs is a new, dangerous, high-dose opioid,” the aforementioned coalition of healthcare, consumer, and addiction treatment professionals wrote to FDA. They added, “Too many people have already become addicted to similar opioid medications, and too many lives have been lost.”

    “This could be the next OxyContin,” a petition on Change.org predicts, as they beseech the FDA to reconsider release of this drug.

    Indeed, in the 90’s, the powerful opiate painkiller called Oxycontin became a popular pill for doctors to push. Patients became quickly addicted, having little or no knowledge about just how addictive it was until it was too late. There were numerous overdose related deaths following the release of that drug – which have only risen since.

    Patients may not have been as aware in the past about potential dangers of painkillers, but efforts have been made in the past couple of decades to educate the public. Likewise, if any new drug (with potentially detrimental effects) hits the market, patients have a right to know the whole story before their doctor says something like, “If you’re still in pain, let’s try the narcotic rotation method…. I’m going to switch you from your Oxycontin to this new drug called Zohydro” (a suggestion that conveniently helps him pay off that sports car you limped past on your way in).

    Now, don’t get me wrong. There are people in chronic relentless pain who absolutely rely on their pharmaceuticals to get through the excruciating agony that comes with everything from herniated discs to cancer. Trust me, I know. However, this group of the population certainly doesn’t account for the staggering statistics the CDC cites when it comes to narcotic over-prescription, prescription abuse, and overdose deaths.

    Specifically, the CDC indicates “there is currently a growing, deadly epidemic of prescription painkiller abuse. Nearly three out of four prescription drug overdoses are caused by prescription painkillers—also called opioid pain relievers,” adding that the “ rise in overdose deaths in the US parallels a 300% increase since 1999 in the sale of these strong painkillers.”

    In 2008 alone, there were 14,800 deaths attributable to these sorts of drugs (more than cocaine and heroin combined), and caused 475,000 abuse-related emergency room visits the next year – a stat that was half that amount just five years before.

    As far as recent abuse stats go, more than 12 million people admitted in 2010 to taking the drug just for fun (or perhaps to attempt redressing an addiction associated intrinsic void) and that they obtained it without a prescription for any kind of physical infirmity.

    Now, parents, this part is for you.

    Back when Oxycontin was released, abusers quickly realized that crushing the pill and insufflating it (that’s just a fancy way of saying they snort it up their nose holes) could double the high. Veteran addicts and kids pill-pilfering from their parents’ post-operation supply similarly fell prey to this – until the latter group grew up to be the former. In more recent years, efforts have been made by drug companies to reformulate Oxycontin and drugs like it to make it tamper proof (so they couldn’t be taken any way but orally).

    Zohydro, however, is not tamper proof.

    “It’s a whopping dose of hydrocodone packed in an easy-to-crush capsule,” Dr. Andrew Kolodny, president of Pysicians for Responsibilbe Opioid Prescribing, warns before adding: “It will kill people as soon as it’s released.”

    Zohydro also packs a five-point punch of potency, compared to its predecessors: “You’re talking about a drug that’s somewhere in the neighborhood of five times more potent than what we’re dealing with now,” said Dr. Stephen Anderson, a Washington emergency room physician. He adds, “I’m five times more concerned, solely based on potency.”

    I’m not here to give a speech or spread unwarranted fear. For some well-read and responsible patients, this drug may be a viable option. But as someone who’s seen firsthand the horrors of prescription abuse and addiction, I feel like there is indeed some warranted level of fear when it comes to heavy duty painkillers – for everyone.

    There are patients who won’t realize how easy it is to overdose.

    There are parents who won’t realize how easy it is for their kids to obtain it.

    And there are doctors whose patients will be abusing it right under their noses (pardon the pun).

    While this drug may end up being the magic bullet for some, a good suggestion might be doing heaps of research (as you always should) before adding this to your prescription collection and moving from the pharmaceutical frying pan to the fire.

    If you or someone you know is suffering from the disease of addiction, help is available.

    Never give up.

    Image via Youtube

  • Review: Porn Addiction Isn’t a Real Thing

    Review: Porn Addiction Isn’t a Real Thing

    The internet has laid human sexuality bare, putting it on display for anyone who cares to type a few letters into a search engine. However the wealth of stimulation available online is certainly more than humans have evolved to deal with, leading some people to value porn more than real intimacy.

    Good news, then, that these same people are not in danger of becoming porn addicts. A new review article published int he journal Current Sexual Health Reports states that there is no current research supporting the concept of porn addiction.

    The review was penned by clinical psychologist David Ley, who admits that some people may view pornography impusively. Ley, though, does not believe that the consequences of frequent porn viewing are all bad.

    His review found that there is little evidence that what people are labeling porn addiction is harmful. Porn “addiction” was not linked to erectile disfunction, changes in adolescent behavior, or any changes in the brain of frequent porn watchers. In addition, Ley found that many studies on the topic lacked methodological rigor and were often based on bad experimental design.

    While researchers seem to be set on demonstrating the negative effects of porn viewing, Ley believes that porn can actually improve sexual attitudes, increase the variety of sexual behaviors, increase pleasure for couples, and increase quality of life overall. He also controversially states that porn could be a viable legal way for those with deviant sexual urges to relieve them, pointing to research that has linked the availability of certain porn to a decrease in real-life sexual crimes.

    “We need better methods to help people who struggle with the high frequency use of visual sexual stimuli, without pathologizing them or their use thereof,” wrote Ley. “Rather than helping patients who may struggle to control viewing images of a sexual nature, the ‘porn addiction’ concept instead seems to feed an industry with secondary gain from the acceptance of the idea.”

  • Elijah Blue Allman Talks About His Heroin Addiction

    Elijah Blue Allman, age 37, is the son of the legendary rocker Gregg Allman, of the Allman Brothers Band and Cher, who were married during the 70’s. In Gregg’s recent biography, “My Cross To Bear” he reveals his addiction to alcohol, heroin and other drugs. It was the catalyst to his break-up with Cher as she wasn’t willing to deal with his addiction.

    His son Elijah may have inadvertently followed in his footsteps, as evidenced when he stated, “I started using drugs at age 11.”

    What followed was a long battle with addiction, which led to some “close calls” with mortality, he revealed in a recent interview with Entertainment Tonight.

    He explains, “I started with drugs around the same time that we all did, around 11,” adding that he first experimented with weed and ecstasy. “I mean, it’s just what you did, it’s just what everybody did.”

    He didn’t stop there though, he moved onto the harder drugs.

    “I [was] just looking to escape all the things in my past and, that’s when you turn to those kind of drugs, you know heroin and opiates,” he said. “[Heroin] kind of saved me … If I didn’t have that at that point, I don’t know what I would have done …You may jump off a bridge. If you can only just go through that time period and live through it and then get help.”

    Sadly, just as so many heroin addicts have died, with the most recent being the actor Philip Seymour Hoffman whose death has brought the drug and its dangers into the light, Elijah admitted to nearly overdosing more than once:

    “I did have some close calls and some moments of really feeling at the edge of mortality … I always kind of kept it a little bit safe but you never can do that. Even though you think that in your mind, of course the wrong things can happen,” he said. “The wrong combination of things can happen and you can just slip into the abyss. I knew it was wrong and I knew that I was very unsatisfied with life at that point.”

    But it is certain that Elijah learned a lesson or two from his experiences, as he got sober and has stayed clean since 2008.

    Image via YouTube

  • Philip Seymour Hoffman And The Reality Of Addiction

    Philip Seymour Hoffman will be remembered as a talented actor who was loved as respected for his craft, and who will leave behind devastated family and friends.

    The 46-year old actor was found yesterday in his Manhattan apartment, and it is now being reported that he died of a drug overdose.

    Law enforcement sources claim that he was found on the floor of his apartment’s bathroom, and that there was a needle still in his arm. Police found eight empty glassine-type bags, with the words “Ace of Hearts” and “Ace of Spades”—street names for heroin. Two bags full of what is believed to be heroin were also recovered at the scene by law enforcement officials.

    As the reality dawns on onlookers that this was a death caused by addiction, some are taking a far less sympathetic view of the matter:

    Jared Padalecki, star of TV’s “Supernatual” gave a comment that is currently receiving a great deal of backlash.

    (image)

    Some people, who have never struggled with addiction themselves or been touched by it through a loved one’s addiction have a habit of greatly underestimating the life-long hold it has on an individual. One never stops being an alcoholic even if one is able to stop drinking. The temptation and desire are there and a relapse is always possible.

    In the case of Hoffman, he had reportedly struggled with a heroin addiction for over two decades.

    He admitted in an interview with 60 Minutes that his issues with drugs and alcohol began shortly after finishing college in 1989

    “It was all that drugs and alcohol, yeah….It was anything that I could get my hands on. I liked it all.”

    Eventually Hoffman was able to get over his addiction, which he managed to fight for 23 years before voluntarily checking into rehab in May 2013.

    It wasn’t as if Hoffman hadn’t tried to stop using drugs. It wasn’t even as if he didn’t try to get help when he knew he needed it.

    It’s not a matter of being “strong enough” or “good enough” or “wise enough”. Anyone can become addicted to a substance under the right circumstances. And it’s not always a matter of drugs and alcohol. Sex addiction. Food addiction and addiction to sugar. Addiction to technology and the internet.

    There are no safe addictions. There is no cure-all for addiction. It is facing the reality that something has a hold of you and admitting you have a problem. If any good can come of the death of Philip Seymour Hoffman, maybe the discussion of his death and how he died will make someone somewhere realize that they need help and seek rehab. If that’s you, DO NOT WAIT.

    Images via Wikimedia Commons, Jared Padalecki’s Twitter (screencapped by Jezebel)

  • Caffeine Use Disorder: It’s a Thing

    Caffeine Use Disorder: It’s a Thing

    Coffee addicts, listen up! Caffeine has now been categorized as a drug in the DSM-5. Need help quitting? That may be coming soon, according to Yahoo.

    “Caffeine is a drug, a mild stimulant which is used by almost everybody on a daily basis,” said Charles O’Brien, chair of the Substance-Related Disorders Work Group. “Normally, there’s no problem with that. But it does have a letdown afterwards,” he added. “If you drink a lot of coffee, usually two or three cups at a time, there will be a rebound or withdrawal effect.”

    In a new study from researchers at American University in Washington, D.C., it is found that drinking several cups of coffee each day can become habit-forming, and when a person tries to quit, they can experience withdrawal symptoms like headaches and fatigue. If you’ve ever tried to quit, as I have, you might agree there is also a good amount of crankiness.

    “The negative effects of caffeine are often not recognized as such because it is a socially acceptable and widely consumed drug that is well integrated into our customs and routines,” said the study’s co-author and American University psychology professor Laura Juliano, reported by Post Media News. “And while many people can consume caffeine without harm, for some it produces negative effects, physical dependence, interferes with daily functioning, and can be difficult to give up.”

    This new study could possibly result in greater clarity in labeling of products containing caffeine and the amounts they contain, according to Juliano.

    “At this time, manufacturers are not required to label caffeine amounts, and some products such as energy drinks do not have regulated limits on caffeine,” Juliano said. “Through our research, we have observed that people who have been unable to quit or cut back on caffeine on their own would be interested in receiving formal treatment — similar to the outside assistance people can turn to if they want to quit smoking or tobacco use.”

    It would be interesting to see what some of those treatments would be. It is a fairly hard habit to kick, but if you can’t, you should at least try to reduce your intake to 2-3 8oz. cups of coffee per day (or 400 mg caffeine) to avoid withdrawal symptoms, according to Juliano.

    Image via wikimedia commons

  • Quit Smoking – But Don’t Use E-Cigarettes

    Experts claim that smoking is an addiction similar to a heroine addiction because nicotine is just as difficult to quit.

    The premise behind quitting cigarettes, aside from the health benefits from quitting now, is that the biggest percentage of smoking is habit. The phone rings, a smoker picks up a cig, a cup of coffee stimulates the habit to smoke, well, you get the general idea.

    The biggest hurdle in quitting smoking is breaking the habit. Sure the addiction is tough, but after 3 days or perhaps sooner, that nicotine craving diminishes and is gone, and what you feel afterward is the urge to continue the habit.

    So if quitting is mostly about breaking a habit, how much sense does it make to use E-cigarettes?

    Although those little electronic smoking devices were designed to eliminate smoking the real thing, smoking them will not ease the cravings for the real thing, over time.

    Youth who were smoking electronic cigarettes in a desperate bid to quit smoking ended up smoking even more on a regular basis.

    And since E-cigarettes come with nicotine infused juices, what is the point? Users say that the point is being able to smoke in public, where many establishments have banned smoking, even in bars and night clubs.

    And ad campaigns tout them as the solution to cigarette smoking, but that is just not the case.

    Contrary to expectations, the young were not weaned off the real stuff thanks to e-cigarettes. Actually, they ended up getting even more addicted to the “habit” and it has become a rarity to find a person smoking an e-cigarette who quit smoking altogether.

    They just don’t help with the most difficult task, the 21-day rule for breaking a habit.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Britain’s Gaming Addiction Gets The NMA Treatment

    Are you addicted to video games? You probably want to say no, but you realize that spending 40 or more hours a week in front of a screen might not be all that healthy. Well, rest easy knowing that you’re not as bad as some gamers in the UK.

    Domino’s Pizza recently surveyed UK gamers to ask them multiple questions about their gaming habits. While most surveys would be content to just ask about average weekly playtime, Domino’s went a bit deeper. The chain found that half of all male gamers would rather play games than have sex. Some female gamers also reported not showing up to important events, like weddings or funerals, to play games.

    As expected, our favorite Taiwanese animators at NMA couldn’t leave such a story alone. In it, we’re treated to the extremes some people will go through to keep playing games. The video may even be prophetic as a bride is playing games via the Oculus Rift while she’s at the altar. Nothing says love like ignoring the groom to play a French Revolution simulator.

    While the above may be in jest, any kind of addiction is no laughing matter. I have stared into the abyss of gaming addiction and it isn’t pretty. This isn’t to say that you should give up on your current gaming habits, but sprinkling in other activities, especially those with friends, is never a bad idea.

    [Image: Taiwanese Animators/YouTube]

  • Demi Lovato’s Second Book in the Making

    Superstar Demi Lovato has remained in the spotlight for a long period of time, since her days on the Disney Channel. Though her career has skyrocketed, she has also endured many personal struggles along the way. Her book of affirmations, titled Staying Strong: 365 Days a Year, was her first book released on November 19, 2013 as part of a two-book deal with Feiwel and Friends, an imprint of the publishing company, Macmillan. As described by Macmillan, the book is “a powerful 365-day collection of Demi’s most honest, brave, and hopeful insights,” featuring “her own words, with quotes that inspire her, as well as personal reflections and goals.”

    It reached to the No. 38 spot on USA Today’s Best-Selling Books list and was transpired from Lovato’s inspirational tweets, in which she sends to over twenty million followers. The book’s affirmations are explained by Lovato, along with a goal for the day. Inspirational phrases include:
    – “You are beautifully and wonderfully made.”
    – “One’s destination is never a place, but a new way of seeing things.”
    – “Every life has a purpose. Share your story and you may help someone find their own.”

    Staying Strong “kind of reads my mind a little bit. Each relates to the day, and just reminds me to be thankful for what I have,” Lovato commented. Back in 2010, she sought treatment in a rehabilitation facility for an eating disorder and has continued to speak out about her personal struggles with addiction and self-harm. In her recent book, she discussed those issues. “Self-harm, eating disorders, addiction, and mood disorders are things that people aren’t always open about. But it’s so important that someone starts talking about these issues so that those who are struggling know that there is help out there.” Lovato has also been involved with anti-bullying charities and currently is a judge on the X-Factor and an actress on Glee.

    Yet, Lovato plans on going into great detail about her addiction in her forthcoming memoir. Lovato stated, “I’m nervous to share my story. But the last time I did, people were really respectful and nobody judged me. Sometimes I have to ask myself, ‘How honest do I really want to be with this book.’ But I think I’m going to do it. I think I’m going to go for it.”. She will truly and deeply express her battles with substance abuse, and how she overcame and continues to overcome those struggles, “like a skyscraper.”

    From her home in Los Angeles, Lovato said, “To me, staying strong is really important. A lot of people have faith, have hope, but now what? How do you continue to be strong? It’s about doing things daily and taking care of yourself, and I wanted to show my fans what helped me.”

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Amsterdam Alcoholics Are Given Beer to Clean Streets

    Amsterdam Alcoholics Are Given Beer to Clean Streets

    Getting paid in beer might sound like a pretty sweet deal for some of us, but many are questioning Amsterdam’s new program that gives alcoholics beer to clean the streets. As odd as this sounds, Amsterdam officials say these people are actually consuming less alcohol per day now thanks to the program.

    The homeless people who participate in this government-funded street cleaning program are given five cans of lager, half a packet of rolling tobacco and the equivalence of around $11 USD per shift to clean the streets. They are also given a hot lunch. The officials are pretty strict about when these people can consume their beer–they are allowed two beers before work, two at lunch and one after their shift is over. Beer before and during work? It’s easy to see why some people question the program. (But wouldn’t most of us like to get on board for that?)

    Since many people are questioning Amsterdam’s “pay alcoholics beer to work” policy, the leader of this group, Gerrie Holterman, addressed the concerns. “This group of chronic alcoholics was causing a nuisance in Amsterdam’s Oosterpark: fights, noise, disagreeable comments to women,” she said. “The aim is to keep them occupied, to get them doing something so they no longer cause trouble at the park. They’re no longer in the park, they drink less, they eat better and they have something to keep them busy during the day. Heroin addicts can go to shooting galleries, so why shouldn’t we also give people beer?”

    Do you think Amsterdam’s program that gives alcoholics beer to clean streets is a good idea? Respond below.

    Even though Holterman says the Amsterdam alcoholics are consuming less alcohol now thanks to the program, one participant disagrees. “I don’t think that we drink less. When we leave here, we go to the supermarket and transform the €10 we earned into beers,” a man identified as “Frank” said.

    Fortunately, most of the other men in the program have a different perspective. Other participants applaud the program because it provides “structure” and they drink light beer that has a reduced alcohol content. Also, one man says that since he’s put in a hard day of work, he doesn’t really want to drink in the evening.

    [Image via YouTube]

  • ABC News Anchor Elizabeth Vargas Seeks Treatment

    ABC News anchor Elizabeth Vargas is currently in rehabilitation for alcohol dependency. At fifty-one years old, the host of ABC News specials and co-anchor of ABC’s 20/20 has checked herself into rehab, which has been confirmed by the network. She has worked for the network since 1996, and is married to fifty-four year old Marc Cohn, a singer, songwriter, and musician, who is best known for his song, “Walking in Memphis.” She also has two sons, named Zachary, who is ten years old, and Samuel, seven.

    The New York Daily News was the first to report the story, stating how Vargas has been in a “well-respected rehab center” for approximately three weeks. Vargas has confirmed the story in a statement, which gives reason for her absence on 20/20 in recent weeks.

    “Like so many people, I am dealing with addiction. I realized I was becoming increasingly dependent on alcohol. And feel fortunate to have recognized it for the problem it was becoming,” she said. Those who are close to Vargas, including ABC’s team, continue to support Vargas through her difficult time.

    “We look forward to having her back home at ABC News, where she has done so much distinguished work over the years. Elizabeth is a member of our family, and we will support her in every way we can,” said ABC News representative Jeffrey Schneider.

    Elizabeth Vargas also hopes to motivate others to seek assistance, as she states: “I am in treatment and am so thankful for the love and support of my family, friends and colleagues at ABC News. Like so many others, I will deal with this challenge one day at a time. If coming forward today gives one other person the courage to seek help, I’m grateful.”

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Elizabeth Vargas Checks Into Rehab

    If you have been wondering why Elizabeth Vargas has been missing from her desk on ABC’s “20/20”, we finally have an answer. ABC confirmed Wednesday that Vargas has checked into a rehab facility to battle her alcohol addiction.

    ABC is fully supportive of Vargas and says she will have her job waiting on her when she gets better. “We look forward to having her back home at ABC News where she has done so much distinguished work over the years,” said ABC News representative Jeffrey Schneider. “Elizabeth is a member of our family and we will support her in every way we can.” In the meantime, Vargas’ co-anchor, David Muir, will continue to host the show.

    “She’s checked herself into a facility, and she’s getting treatment,” a source close to Vargas said. “She’s been there for a few weeks and will be there for another few weeks.”

    Vargas realized that she was becoming increasingly more dependent on alcohol and recognized that it was time for her to seek professional help.

    “I realized I was becoming increasingly dependent on alcohol,” she said. “And feel fortunate to have recognized it for the problem it was becoming. I am in treatment and am so thankful for the love and support of my family, friends and colleagues at ABC News. Like so many others, I will deal with this challenge one day at a time. If coming forward today gives one other person the courage to seek help, I’m grateful.”

    Vargas joined ABC for “Good Morning America” in 1996, and then became co-anchor of “20/20” in 2004.

    Image via Twitter

  • Jada Pinkett Smith Mentions Addictions On Facebook

    The Smith family has not resembled The Cleaver family lately. There have been many rumors circulating concerning Will and Jada Smith selling their house, having an open-marriage, and their imminent divorce. The bad media hasn’t been limited to Will and Jada, though. Their son Jaden became the target of Twitter-ridicule last week after releasing a series of tweets in which he pontificated about issues such as intelligence, school, and rules.

    Now, the rumor mill is churning once again. This time, Jada Pinkett Smith finds herself the target of the media for recent comments posted on her Facebook account. In a status update on September 19th, Smith mentioned having past addictions:

    Jada Pinkett Smith Facebook Status

    Since that post, the media has been ablaze concerning the addictions mentioned. Most outlets seem to agree that the addictions are of the drug or eating disorder variety.

    Smith has previously commented on the conditions she grew up in as a child, giving credence to the beliefs that the addictions centered on drugs: “I grew up in a drug-infested neighborhood where you walk out each day and you just hope that you make it. I came from a war zone. There was a possibility that I wouldn’t make it past 21—that was the reality. When I turned 40 (last year) it was a surreal moment because I had never imagined reaching 40.”

    The drug theory also makes sense considering Smith’s mother was a drug-addict herself. In commenting about the lifestyle of luxury her children live compared to her own upbringing, Smith remarked, “What I had to think about was, ‘Oh man, I wonder what I’m going to eat tonight because there’s no food here. How am I going to get to school? And is my mom going to be okay today? Will this be one more day she survives her addiction?’ That’s the kind of stuff I had to think about at 11.”

    The buzz that has been created surrounding this Facebook status demonstrates how obsessed Americans are with celebrities. Jada Pinkett Smith hasn’t been involved in any successful projects in a long time (Her last major project was the TV series “Hawthorne”, which ended in 2011), and yet the internet still goes crazy due to a rather ambiguous and benign Facebook post. Smith did not reveal what her addictions were, yet the speculation still runs amok. Perhaps she was addicted to Cheerios, which could only result in lower cholesterol and a healthy heart? Until her next Facebook update, the world may never know…

    Image via Facebook