The Agony of Heroin Addiction
A look at a young woman’s triumph over one of the world’s deadliest drugs through successful addiction treatment
(PRWEB) June 15, 2005 -- “I became a statistic at the age of 20 when I
started using heroin,” explains Erica, a beautiful young woman who completed the
Narconon Arrowhead drug rehabilitation program. “There is no way to describe the
daily misery and agony I went through while addicted to heroin.” By looking at
her, one would never guess that she was a former drug addict. Unfortunately, her
case is not unusual.
According to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration (SAMHSA), the proportion of new heroin users admitted to
substance abuse treatment who were younger than 25 years old increased from 30
to 41 percent between 1992 and 2000. More than 80 percent of the total new
heroin users are under the age of 20.
Heroin was the leading illicit
drug among substance abuse treatment admissions in 2000, reported by 15 percent
of the 1.6 million addiction treatment admissions in SAMHSA's Treatment Episode
Data Set (TEDS).
Heroin can be injected, sniffed/snorted, or smoked.
Admissions trend data suggest that many users begin using heroin in the inhaled
form and switch to injecting heroin later in their lifetime. Intravenous heroin
users are at an extremely high risk of catching diseases that go along with
using the syringe such as HIV/AIDS and hepatitis.
A drug that was once
found in cough syrup, heroin’s immediate effects include dry mouth and a heavy
feeling, which may be accompanied by nausea, and/or vomiting and itching of the
face and body and drowsiness lasting several hours. Mental function, cardiac
function and breathing is clouded and/or slowed by heroin's effect on the
central nervous system.
Aside from the devastating effects of taking the
drug and the lifestyle that goes with its use, many addicts of opiates such as
heroin fear the pain and discomfort of withdrawal from the drug, which drives
them to use more. Symptoms of withdrawal include severe bone and muscle pain,
insomnia and restlessness, diarrhea, vomiting, goose bumps, sweats and
involuntary leg movements.
“It felt like I was going to die,” explains
Erica of her own withdrawal from the drug.
It is common for heroin
addicts to be turned on to synthetic opiates such as methadone for
“maintenance,” but replacing one drug for another is not a viable solution for
ending the addiction. Most methadone users wind up increasing their dosage
instead of stepping down because a tolerance is built for that drug as well. In
addition, methadone patients are physically dependent and methadone and
withdrawal periods are much more violent.
Regardless of what drug is
being used, the effects and cravings last beyond the initial withdrawal stage.
Physical cravings for the drug may last several months after usage ceases. In
the 1970s, it was discovered that drug particles get stored in the fatty tissue
of the body and remain there for years, getting released back into the blood
stream when those cells are turned to for energy and a person’s heart rate
increases.
A unique detoxification program used by the Narconon
Arrowhead that was researched and developed by American author and humanitarian
L. Ron Hubbard flushes out the old drug residues and eliminates those physical
cravings. A low-heat, dry sauna is used in conjunction with essential vitamins,
minerals, amino acids and polyunsaturated oils to purge the body of the toxins
and replace it with healthy, clean tissue.
According to Erica, “It was
amazing! I couldn’t believe that I no longer craved heroin or felt the effects
from it. I truly felt like a new person.”
Unfortunately, the fact is that
hundreds of thousands of people are presently undergoing the misery of heroin
addiction every day in the United States alone. There is a solution though and
drug addiction can be overcome. If you or someone you love needs help with
addiction, contact Narconon Arrowhead today at 1-800-468-6933 or visit www.heroinaddiction.com.
# # #
Source : http://www.prweb.com/releases/2005/6/prweb251021.htm