More women are dying from overdoses of narcotic pain medication than cervical cancer or homicide. They tend to be poor, older
white women living in rural areas who are also taking medications for
depression and anxiety.
Some of the reasons for this trend are as
follows: Pain medications are readily available; women are prescribed pain medication
at higher doses; women are diagnosed with depression and treated with
medications at a higher rate. Women who are single mothers struggling financially
are more likely to experience symptoms of depression and anxiety (duh!).
It’s somehow rational that an unhappy or
depressed person would succumb to the quick, narcotic relief delivered in a
pill. Why not take a respite from pain when it simply means swallowing a pill,
even though taking this short cut can mean dealing with serious consequences
such as full-blown addiction and even overdose. One symptom of depression is a shortened sense of time or the inability to consider the future at all; so the depressed person is not likely to consider the risks involved when self-medicating with an opiate.
This phenomenon illustrates the fact that substanceabuse and mental illness are two sides of the same coin. It also shows that personal choices and lack of
proper planning can cause stresses later on. At the same time, government policies also create
hardship that contribute to poor mental health. And, pharmaceutical industry is guilty of profiting
from products that are often abused as a quick fix to escape the
hardships.
It also shows us that managing symptoms with medication alone is inadequate because it only cushions our
ability to handle anguish. A pill cannot change the facts of a life and its
context. Experience of pain can be temporarily delayed but it cannot be erased.
Soon or later one must begin the tough work to locate the source or the cause of emotional pain. And,
if the source of pain is outside ourselves then we must adapt to it or work on changing the environment.
Not everybody requires medically supervised detox or an extended stint in rehab. the level of care you need depends on your age, drug use history, and other medical or psychiatric conditions.
ReplyDeleteUnfortunately there are a lot of people who are addicted to this drug, making it one of the most popular drugs in some in and around all over the world.
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