Tuesday, September 7th, 2010 at
10:59 pm

- Insect Bite Relief, 2 oz
- 0
- 12 Per Case
- OTC6988
- Category Tree: Over-The-Counter Drugs > Topical Treatments > Prevention Insect Bite Relief > >
Product DescriptionHelps relieve magpie? Ny pain. Helps relieve swelling? No mosquitoes, ara? As bees, wasps, hornets, bites and stings.
Prevention? No Relief insect bite – insect sting relief, 2 ounces – 12 per box – Model OTC6988
Friday, August 27th, 2010 at
11:13 pm

Product DescriptionThe drug war is a war against ordinary people. With this assumption, the historian Richard Lawrence Miller analyzes America’s war on drugs with a passion rarely found in serious nonfiction. Miller presents numerous examples of the struggle against drugs has gone out of control, police and the courts and a threat to happiness, property, and even the lives of victims – some of whom are never charged with a drug crime , much less convicted of one. Miller argues that not only fans of criminal justice are harming democracy who have sworn to protect, but the authoritarian democracy hostile to feed the public fear to convince people to abandon traditional legal rights. These are the same rights as impeding the implementation of a program of social control through the power of government. Miller argues that an imaginary “drug crisis” was manufactured by authoritarians in order to mask their war against democracy. Not only examines numerous civil rights sacrificed in the name of the drug, but it shows how the loss hurts ordinary Americans in their daily lives.
Drug Warriors and their Prey: From Police Power to Police State
Monday, August 16th, 2010 at
10:59 pm

Product DescriptionFree yourself AddictionQuitting drugs may be the best thing you can do for you and your loved ones. It can also be the toughest challenge of his life. This book can help. Jerry Dorsman, author of the acclaimed How to stop drinking without AA and a therapist who specializes in respect of addiction recovery, has helped thousands of people to quit and move on with their lives. In How to quit drugs for good, Dorsman helps you find the best approach to beating any addiction to drugs-of barbiturates and prescription drugs to marijuana, cocaine and heroin. Through a series of self-discovery exercises, worksheets and checklists, you will learn how to: Determine • If you have a drug problem · Examine the individual reasons for drug use · Decide when and how you want Develop quit · Choose your own treatment plan of the techniques that work for you · create your own success • And much, much more! From the Trade Paperback edition.
How to Quit Drugs for Good: A Complete Guide Help
Thursday, August 5th, 2010 at
11:00 pm

Product DescriptionThe National Drug Control has failed its two major functions (supply reduction and demand reduction) due to wrong assumptions concerning almost all aspects of alcohol and drug fields, charges author Fisher. However, despite the overwhelming evidence of those responsible for this failure of policy have strongly resisted discussing major changes in the assumptions underlying current policy, due to political pressure, prejudice and bigotry philosophical, he adds. Fisher discusses controversial topics and defends common approaches in chapters focused on subjects including legalization, harm reduction, the futility of supply reduction, the problem of alcohol consumption by minors and the effectiveness of treatment and prevention. He proposes a new national policy on drug control, including the elimination of the war metaphor, inclusion of alcohol in the mandate, conceptualization of addiction as a public health problem, the use of harm reduction principles to guide policy and discontinuation of approaches that isolate drug and alcohol problems of their connection to broader social issues such as poverty. In this paper, the premises of the current National Strategy for Drug Control are challenged, and both Democratic and Republican administrations throughout the last 10 years are examined critically. Statements by the Director of the Office of National Drug Control are criticized. main points are that there is no evidence of the NDCS has achieved none of its objectives, that harm reduction should be the guiding principle, and supply reduction should not be part of the national strategy.
Rethinking our war on drugs: Talk about controversial issues Candid
Sunday, July 25th, 2010 at
11:01 pm

Product DescriptionAbstract: The risk of osteoporotic hip fracture can be reduced by using a combination of therapeutic strategies. A preventive program that effectively combines a bisphosphonate, calcium supplements, adequate vitamin D intake, and proper attention to exercise and the dangers in the patient’s environment can significantly reduce the incidence of hip fracture and associated morbidity and mortality. In this article, Dr. Fiechtner discusses nonpharmacologic preventive measures and various drug therapies, and ways to measure the effectiveness of treatments.
Hip fracture prevention of drug therapies and lifestyle changes that can reduce the risk of widespread application of available therapies can reduce the number of victims of this common consequence of osteoporosis.
Wednesday, July 14th, 2010 at
10:59 pm

Product-based drug prevention DescriptionSchool, popular among the public and politicians, is now almost a universal experience for American youth. Analysis has shown that the best programs can reduce the use of a wide range of substances. But questions remain about how to think and, therefore, to fund these programs. Should they be regarded primarily as weapons in the war against illegal drugs, or, at the other end, making prevention programs to benefit students and society most by reducing the consumption of alcohol and snuff? The authors address these questions by comparing for the first time the social benefits of the impacts of prevention programs based in schools’ long term in a diverse set of different substances.
School-Based Drug Prevention: What kind of drug use prevents you from?
Saturday, July 3rd, 2010 at
10:59 pm

DescriptionIf product you are involved with the health system, you know that drug-induced cases are so complex injuries are common. While the injury to the patient may seem obvious, in fact it has very little effect on the course of the litigation will be a. This makes it especially important to accurately assess the case. You want to be sure that if you take into account merit and be economically viable, both for you and your client. To achieve this, they require knowledge of pharmacy and drug manufacturing industry, which is carefully detailed in this book. Easy for non-medical professional to follow, the book is divided into three useful sections. The first section deals with the pharmaceutical process, covering the liability of pharmaceutical companies, warning labels and clinical trials. The second section examines the therapies of high-risk drugs that result in pharmaceutical litigation. Whether or not your case involves one of the drugs listed, you will find that the theories applicable to a pharmacist if generally applicable to another. The third section of the book analyzes the pharmaceutical and professional malpractice claims. It also includes appendices of FDA regulations related to drug product liability, guidance for industry, the use of risk minimization plans, and FDA pregnancy classifications. Topics include: The system failed drug warnings in the U.S. clinical research: treatment of human testing for FDA regulation of the identification of regulated clinical research for solid dosage forms nephrotoxic drugs Assessment of causality in the drug injury cases The role of pharmacoepidemiology and drug expert testimony in injury E-Ferol The disaster Fen-Phen, Redux Debacle drugs for asthma, allergies and anaphylaxis: damage by the use, misuse and nonuse . Dietary Supplements Health and Education Act of 1994 Antidepressants: clinical use and litigation performance enhancing drugs and pain medication OxyContin Ephedra pharmacy regulations and litigation exacerbate NABP Model and Measure Standards
Drug Injury: Liability, Analysis and Prevention, Second Edition
Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010 at
11:01 pm

- ISBN13: 9780810972865
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Product DescriptionFrom 1935-1975, almost all drug addicts was arrested by the Narcotics Farm. Equal parts federal prison, treatment center, farm and research laboratory, the farm was designed to rehabilitate addicts and help researchers find a cure for drug addiction. Although it began as a bold and ambitious public project works, and became famous as a rehabilitation center frequented by jazz musicians among others, the farm was closed forty years after it opened amid scandal over its drug-testing program, experiments involving the prisoners were being used as human guinea pigs and rewarded with heroin and cocaine for their efforts. Published to coincide with a documentary to be broadcast on PBS, The Narcotic Farm includes unedited and unpublished photographs, film stills, newspaper and magazine clippings, government documents and interviews, writings and stories of the prisoners, doctors, and trace rather noble guards of the farm and tumultuous fall, revealing the compelling story of what really happened inside the prison. Narcotics Farm is a beautiful book, fascinating, that takes readers deeper into a forgotten American institution. The images are amazing and the story takes an important moment in the living history to life. It’s an awesome job. Dave Isay, StoryCorps founder of the adventure story longer and deeper U.S. with addictive drugs is incomplete without mentioning the legendary federal narcotics hospital in Lexington, Kentucky. The Narcotic Farm tells this story well, and offers a wealth of revealing photographs and documents that speak volumes about what it meant to be a drug addict in the mid-twentieth century. Luc Sante, author of Low Life and Evidence The Narcotic Farm works to regain his magic, in pictures and words, the lost world of “Narco,” the lengthy federal prison-hospital for drug addicts in Lexington, Kentucky. Are the details you receive, from the misery of the withdrawal disheveled the uninhibited joy of playing in the jazz house. David Courtwright, author of Dark Paradise, who survived the addicts and HabitEveryone Forces who cares about addiction and recovery in this country should look at these pictures and read the text. Susan Cheever, author of My name is Bill Wilson: His Life and the creation of Alcoholics Anonymous and Desire: Where Sex Meets Addiction “The ‘drug’, with its combination of jail and hospital, drug experimentation and drug treatment, and farm total institution exemplifies the contradictions of U.S. drug policy. The authors should be congratulated for their text accessible and high quality images that convey vividly the history of Narcotics Farm of large hopes of its birth to its evolution into a fraternity “for drug addicts” .- Eric Schneider – “Smack: Heroin and the American city,” University of Pennsylvania Press, 2008
The Narcotic Farm: The Rise and Fall of America’s First Prison for drug addicts
Friday, June 11th, 2010 at
11:00 pm

- Unsharpened, round barrel in assorted neon colors, eraser.
- Say No To Drugs Logo in black lettering.
Product pencils will serve as a reminder DescriptionThese positive throughout the year for oyur students or children. Hand out these pencils during Red Ribbon Week or at any time of year. These pencils are sure to get the message to students.
Neon Say No to Drugs Pencil. Every 36
Monday, May 31st, 2010 at
11:01 pm

Product DescriptionThis study explores a cost-effectiveness analysis of a portal on drug misuse prevention. It begins with a review of the effectiveness of information provision via the Internet and of the cost-effectiveness of drug misuse prevention in general. It discusses what the effect of a portal may be, and calculates the direct costs and possible benefits. The results imply that the portal is probably useful and effective, and mostly cost-effective.
Reaching Prevention Professionals: The Mentor Portal—Cost-Benefit Analysis of a Drug Misuse Prevention Portal