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DEA: Clean out your medicine cabinets Saturday

sac beh

Member
If they had only included data about unintentional marijuana overdoses in their comparison...

(AP) -- Tim Strain was a victim of prescription drugs, not an abuser. His girlfriend's mother gave the 18-year-old additional pain medication for a serious burn, producing a fatal drug interaction.

Now his parents, Bernie and Beverly Strain, want the memory of their son to make a difference for others. The suburban Philadelphia couple are joining with the Drug Enforcement Administration to encourage people to take a few minutes on Saturday to clean out their medicine cabinets.

The national prescription drug "Take-Back" campaign will offer more than 4,000 sites around the nation where the public can drop off expired, unused and unwanted prescription drugs.

"We have an epidemic," says acting DEA administrator Michele Leonhart, whose agency is working with thousands of state and local agencies and the Partnership for a Drug-Free America on Saturday's campaign.

"Our research shows that the No. 1 source of medicines that kids abuse is their own home medicine cabinet or a family member or friend's home," says Steve Pasierb, the partnership's president.

Unintentional overdose deaths involving prescription narcotics increased 175 percent in a six-year span to 11,001 in 2006, according to data collected by the federal government.

In 2009, there were 7 million Americans aged 12 years and older who abused prescription drugs for non-medical purposes within the previous month, up from 6.2 million in 2008.

At the DEA, "we're concerned that first-time drug users are just as likely to use pharmaceutical drugs as they are marijuana; every day on average 2,500 teens use prescription drugs to get high for the first time," Leonhart said in an interview. "We are seeing a trend where 56 percent of teens think prescription drugs are easier to get, two of five teens believe prescription drugs are much safer than other drugs and three in 10 teens believe prescription drugs are not addictive."

Over the past two years, the DEA has nearly doubled the number of agents assigned to investigate the diversion of prescription drugs into illegal channels and is strengthening its regulatory oversight on DEA-registered manufacturers, distributors and retailers who handle these substances.

The DEA also is employing the Ryan Haight Online Pharmacy Consumer Protection Act that makes it harder for cyber-criminals to illegally sell prescription drugs via the Internet.

The Take-Back event also is a way to address environmental problems that arise when unwanted prescription drugs are flushed down the toilet or dumped at a landfill. Residue from the drugs can end up at wastewater treatment plants that cannot handle the chemicals. Or the chemicals can leach out into groundwater. The DEA incinerates the unwanted prescription drugs it collects.

It is illegal to turn over controlled substances to anyone other than law enforcement officers. But legislation sponsored by Sens. John Cornyn, R-Texas, and Amy Klobochar, D-Minn., would allow state and private entities to institute responsible drug take-back programs. A measure sponsored by Rep. Jay Enslee, D-Wash., would allow local communities to create safe drug disposal programs.

http://www.physorg.com/news204469569.html
 
G

guest456mpy

While I do get rid of old medications (Like when Mrs H.G. broke her foot... then later no longer needed her meds) I do it with the common sense method of flushing it down the toilet.

Turn it in to a LEO indeed! Another prompt to enforce the need for a "nanny state"?

Please!
 

sac beh

Member
While I do get rid of old medications (Like when Mrs H.G. broke her foot... then later no longer needed her meds) I do it with the common sense method of flushing it down the toilet.

Turn it in to a LEO indeed! Another prompt to enforce the need for a "nanny state"?

Please!

But what about this?

The Take-Back event also is a way to address environmental problems that arise when unwanted prescription drugs are flushed down the toilet or dumped at a landfill. Residue from the drugs can end up at wastewater treatment plants that cannot handle the chemicals. Or the chemicals can leach out into groundwater. The DEA incinerates the unwanted prescription drugs it collects.

Pharmaceuticals are finding their way into our water supplies now. No concerns about that?
 
G

guest456mpy

You know what Sac, I think I may have not thought that all the way through....
It was an old habit formed in the '50s. I now stand corrected!


BTW... I've amended my signature to make it much more apparent I'm not telling you in particular to Be Joyful and Live. I removed it for a while to think how I could keep it and not mess with you when I reply to one of your posts, ok my brother?
 

OhGee Kush

New member
I lost a fam member this way.... He was in pain and his girl gave em oc 40s and he never took em before. He said since they so small gimme 3 or 4.. And before she knew it he was cold and dead in his bed... Lost some friends to the benzo x methadone combos.... How about the DEA gets off there fat asses and realize that big pharma is making a push..... Why the fuck would a DR not prescribe non addictive drugs??? I mean think on it, you fix the problem and you get paid for one visit.... You get em hooked on pills and they gotta keep coming back each dr visit is $, plus the companys although illegal give drs incentives to prescribe their synthetic heroin. If you ask me that's the problem.... And then there's the people who need em that can't get em lol... I could have my head dangling from a thread and 3 hrs to live and they wouldn't even give me a perc fuck around and gimme an advil or some shit..... But some junky that just needs a bath comes in and leaves with 3 scrips.... Wonderful world we live in pills for everything, they even got a pill you take before you take pills.... Our water already contains pharmaceuticals, flouride also an active ingredient in prozac... It gets deeper...
 

Brother Bear

Simple kynd of man
ICMag Donor
Veteran
While I do get rid of old medications (Like when Mrs H.G. broke her foot... then later no longer needed her meds) I do it with the common sense method of flushing it down the toilet.

Turn it in to a LEO indeed! Another prompt to enforce the need for a "nanny state"?

Please!

Do a search for "pharmaceuticals in our drinking water" and please don't flush anymore :tiphat:

On topic "quote" Another prompt to enforce the need for a "nanny state"? "quote" i totally agree :yes:
 

sac beh

Member
You know what Sac, I think I may have not thought that all the way through....
It was an old habit formed in the '50s. I now stand corrected!


BTW... I've amended my signature to make it much more apparent I'm not telling you in particular to Be Joyful and Live. I removed it for a while to think how I could keep it and not mess with you when I reply to one of your posts, ok my brother?

Right on, we don't want our water turning into a pharma drug cocktail.

Lol, I hadn't noticed your sig... nice...
 

OhGee Kush

New member
Thing that is most fucked up is these jackasses probably spent 5 million in tax dollars just to find out scrip med use is up... I could've told em that for free... I'll be up the block poaching all the people on there way there offering them $ instead.. Lol....
 

sac beh

Member
Thing that is most fucked up is these jackasses probably spent 5 million in tax dollars just to find out scrip med use is up... I could've told em that for free... I'll be up the block poaching all the people on there way there offering them $ instead.. Lol....

Well, I don't see a problem with the government spending money on a program like this if it 1) gives people a place to safely get rid of unwanted drugs 2) brings bad press to pharma drugs 3) makes people think twice about whether they really need that next prescription being pushed on them 4) disposes of the drugs without contaminating our water supply.

It doesn't matter that the DEA may have bad reasons for doing it, or that they are still the enemy of cannabis, the consequences of it seem beneficial, I say.
 

ZEROorDIE

Member
presciprtion drugs; taking down one suburban community at a time.

legalize my weed damnit, i can go get a script of percs for saying im in some pain but i cant fuckin smoke weed.

o well, i have no drugs to give the dea anyway, just plants.
 
Residue from the drugs can end up at wastewater treatment plants that cannot handle the chemicals


How 'bout this one: Stop making/perscribing fucking chemicals that are created by lab rats ran by big pharm!!!

The problem isn't the expired chems with nowhere to go...it's the chems themselves.
EVERYTHING we need is on this planet. F(PH)arm that.
 

phrike

Member
The national prescription drug "Take-Back" campaign will offer more than 4,000 sites around the nation where the public can drop off expired, unused and unwanted prescription drugs.

Only 4,000 sites ? Around here, in Canada, any drugstore will take back unwanted prescription meds at no charge. Not so in the US ?
 

trouble

Well-known member
Veteran
But what about this?

The Take-Back event also is a way to address environmental problems that arise when unwanted prescription drugs are flushed down the toilet or dumped at a landfill. Residue from the drugs can end up at wastewater treatment plants that cannot handle the chemicals. Or the chemicals can leach out into groundwater. The DEA incinerates the unwanted prescription drugs it collects.

Pharmaceuticals are finding their way into our water supplies now. No concerns about that?

Once again, I see it's time for me to step-forward and do my part for my fellow man and the environment.

Anyone wishing to dispose of unused prescriptions such as Opiate's & Diazepam's can simply contact me via PM. And unlike the DEA, I shall guarantee all, that these drugs will be disposed of in a natural manner which is safe to our water supplies.

No need to thank me, I feel that it's my duty to serve my country and Mother Nature.

Duty, Honor, Country is my creed!



:dance013:
 

HempKat

Just A Simple Old Dirt Farmer
Veteran
It doesn't matter that the DEA may have bad reasons for doing it, or that they are still the enemy of cannabis, the consequences of it seem beneficial, I say.

Speaking of alterior motives. In the commercials they had in my area for the event they promote that it's a no questions asked event. Which I find a little puzzling. I mean if you got them legally and decide to turn them in because they're old then there shouldn't be any fear of getting in trouble because you haven't done anything wrong. If you have prescription drugs you've obtained illegally then it's highly unlikely you'll turn them into the cops regardless of if they ask questions or not.

I mean what, do they think that there are prescription drug abusers out there saying, "I'd love to turn these illegal prescriptions over to the cops but I'm afraid they'll ask questions"?
 

NorCalFor20

Smokes, lets go
Veteran
While I do get rid of old medications (Like when Mrs H.G. broke her foot... then later no longer needed her meds) I do it with the common sense method of flushing it down the toilet.

Turn it in to a LEO indeed! Another prompt to enforce the need for a "nanny state"?

Please!

Please don't put your pharmacticals in the toilet. There is no way for the sewage processing plant to extract pharmacuticals from our recycled water so you are releasing your drugs out into our water and making us drink it.... :(

http://www.google.com/url?url=http:...sg=AFQjCNHEETzK0SA-A2fw1s9XAvwevzo0Sw&cad=rja
 

phrike

Member
Speaking of alterior motives. In the commercials they had in my area for the event they promote that it's a no questions asked event. Which I find a little puzzling. I mean if you got them legally and decide to turn them in because they're old then there shouldn't be any fear of getting in trouble because you haven't done anything wrong. If you have prescription drugs you've obtained illegally then it's highly unlikely you'll turn them into the cops regardless of if they ask questions or not.

This is like an amnesty. People need to be told it's a "one time limited offer" to get off their butts and do something. So they imply that you might get in trouble if you don't take advantage.

Besides, parents, spouses etc. could turn in their kids or spouses "mystery RX drugs" with somebody else's name on it.

And yes, I guess if you are caught with someone else's Rx opiates, you could get busted.

I wonder if you could still get busted if you bring illegal non-Rx drugs, which they say they aren't taking ? And anyway, can't you pretty much always drop illegal non-Rx drugs at a police station and say you found it and want to turn it in ? Would they refuse to take them ? (But legally, I guess you're supposed to just report the find to the cops; carrying them to the cop station is still possession.)
 
sacred used to work property management for a busy hospital. in the early morning he would do his rounds checking out the inside of the lobby near the pharmacy..there was a see through safe where you could see all the good meds that they had to had locked up so people wouldn't steal them...OC, dilaudid, morphine ect...sacred used to be an avid opiate user and would think about the problems that came about from restricting the use of these drugs..most of time he was smacked and stoned so he would just shrug it off and say that's life but in reality the money that was being spent on these drugs was going to huge corporate pharmas and drug gangs on the street and should have been going to fund repair of all the problems we have in society...from pot holes to budget deficits..

So what I mean is..logically..Junk is a Junkies mistake..but shouldn't someone benefit from those mistakes? Yes and the people who need to benefit are the youth(schools, better education)..it's not just say no.. it's why shouldn't we? show the youth a better way instead of just saying no..drug money needs to go towards something better...and illegality prevents all of this :tiphat:
 

Stoner4Life

Medicinal Advocate
ICMag Donor
Veteran
sacred used to work property management for a busy hospital. in the early morning he would do his rounds checking out the inside of the lobby near the pharmacy..there was a see through safe where you could see all the good meds that they had to had locked up so people wouldn't steal them...OC, dilaudid, morphine ect...sacred used to be an avid opiate user and would think about the problems that came about from restricting the use of these drugs..most of time he was smacked and stoned so he would just shrug it off and say that's life...
Smooth B? that you?

Stoner4Life can only recall one person (aside from 'Jimmy' in Seinfeld) referring to himself in the 3rd person & that be the Smooth B.......
 
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