Tuesday, July 11, 2017

Signs and Symptoms of Substance Abuse



From the American Council for Drug Education, an affiliate of Phoenix House.
The following are some of the more common signs and symptoms of drug use. It is important to keep in mind that if a person has any of these symptoms, it does not necessarily mean that he or she is using drugs. They could be due to a mental or physical health problem. They might also be due to adolescent development (in the case of teens). Whatever the cause, they may warrant attention, especially if they persist or occur in a cluster.
The key is change – it is important to watch for any significant changes in the person’s physical appearance, personality, attitude or behavior.

Physical Signs

  • Inability to sleep, awake at unusual times, unusual laziness.
  • Loss of or increased in appetite, changes in eating habits
  • Cold, sweaty palms; shaking hands.
  • Red, watery eyes; pupils larger or smaller than usual
  • Unusual smells on breath, body or clothes.
  • Extreme hyperactivity; excessive talkativeness.
  • Slowed or staggering walk; poor physical coordination.
  • Needle marks on lower arm, leg or bottom of feet.
  • Nausea, vomiting or excessive sweating.
  • Tremors or shakes of hands, feet or head.
  • Irregular heartbeat.
  • Runny nose; hacking cough
  • Puffy face, blushing, or paleness
  • Frequent rubbing of the nose
  • Frequent twisting of the jaw, back and forth
  • Deterioration of hygiene or physical health

Behavioral Signs

  • Change in overall attitude/personality with no other identifiable cause.
  • Drop in grades at school or performance at work;
    skips school or is late for school.
  • Change in activities or hobbies.
  • Chronic dishonesty.
  • Sudden oversensitivity, temper tantrums, or resentful behavior.
  • Difficulty in paying attention; forgetfulness.
  • General lack of motivation, energy, self-esteem, “I don’t care” attitude.
  • Change in habits at home; loss of interest in family and family activities.
  • Paranoia
  • Silliness or giddiness.
  • Moodiness, irritability, or nervousness.
  • Excessive need for privacy; unreachable.
  • Secretive or suspicious behavior.
  • Car accidents.
  • Change in personal grooming habits.
  • Possession of drug paraphernalia.
  • Changes in friends; friends are known drug users.
  • Unexplained need for money, stealing money or items
  • Possession of a false ID card
  • Missing prescription pills
  • Complaints of a sore jaw (from teeth grinding during an ecstasy high)
  • Presence of unusual number of spray cans in the trash

Signs of Intoxication, by Specific Drug

  • Marijuana

    Glassy, red eyes; loud talking and inappropriate laughter followed by sleepiness; a sweet burnt scent; loss of interest, motivation; weight gain or loss.
  • Alcohol

    Clumsiness; difficulty walking; slurred speech; sleepiness; poor judgment; dilated pupils.
  • Cocaine, Crack, Meth, and Other Stimulants

    Hyperactivity; euphoria; irritability; anxiety; excessive talking followed by depression or excessive sleeping at odd times; go long periods of time without eating or sleeping; dilated pupils; weight loss; dry mouth and nose.
  • Heroin

    Needle marks; sleeping at unusual times; sweating; vomiting; coughing and sniffling; twitching; loss of appetite; contracted pupils; no response of pupils to light.
  • Depressants (including barbiturates and tranquilizers)

    Seems drunk as if from alcohol but without the associated odor of alcohol; difficulty concentrating; clumsiness; poor judgment; slurred speech; sleepiness; and contracted pupils.
  • Inhalants (Glues, aerosols, and vapors)

    Watery eyes; impaired vision, memory and thought; secretions from the nose or rashes around the nose and mouth; headaches and nausea; appearance of intoxication; drowsiness; poor muscle control; anxiety; irritability
  • Hallucinogens

    Dilated pupils; bizarre and irrational behavior including paranoia, aggression, hallucinations; mood swings; detachment from people; absorption with self or other objects, slurred speech; confusion.

Oh My God I Watched TV, What The Hell Is That &^%*?!

*I have heard many times, "You are what you eat". Is it correct to assume this includes mental nutrition? I had a little insomnia last night and I watched TV and here's my rating: Content - 3 out of 10, Entertainment - 3, Humor - 3, Mental stimulation - 0, Depiction of the real world - 3, Healthy properties - 1. Excuse me but I don't know what they rate that crap by. I will say this, "I can fully interpret why the average person is in the mental emotional state that they are".


Too Much TV Really Is Bad for Your Brain

Young adults who watch a lot of TV and don't exercise much may start to see the effects of their unhealthy habits on their brains as early as midlife, a new study suggests.
In the study, researchers looked at the TV viewing habits of more than 3,200 people, who were 25 years old, on average, at the start of the study. The people in the study who watched more than 3 hours of TV per day on average over the next 25 years were more likely to perform poorly on certain cognitive tests, compared with people who watched little TV, the researchers found.
The results suggest that engaging in physical activity, as opposed to sitting and watching TV, is important for brain health, said study author Tina D. Hoang, of the Northern California Institute for Research and Education at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in San Francisco. "Being physically active at any time in your life is good for your brain," Hoang said.
In the study, the researchers asked the participants every five years how many hours per day they spent watching TV on average during the past year. At the start of the study, and again every two to five years later, the researchers asked the participants if, and how much, they exercised. [6 Foods That Are Good For Your Brain]
After the 25 years, the researchers also examined the people's cognitive function using three tests that assessed the speed at which they processed information, their verbal memory and executive function — a number of mental skills that help people plan, organize and pay attention.
The 353 people in the study who watched more than 3 hours of TV per day, on average, were more likely to perform worse on some of the tests, compared with people who watched little TV, the researchers found.
And the 528 people in the study who exercised the least performed worse on one of the tests than the people who were more physically active, the researchers found.
In addition, the 107 people in the study who both exercised the least and watched more than 3 hours of TV per day were twice as likely to perform poorly on the cognitive tests, compared with those who spent little time watching TV but exercised more.
It is not clear exactly why spending more time watching TV may be linked to worse cognitive performance later in life. One hypothesis is that television viewing is not a cognitively engaging way of spending time, Hoang said.
Or it could be that people who watch a lot of TV and don't exercise much may have other unhealthy lifestyle habits, such as a poor diet, which might also contribute to their worse cognitive function, she said.
The new study was published today (Dec. 2) in the journal JAMA Psychiatry.
Follow Agata Blaszczak-Boxe on Twitter. Follow Live Science @livescienceFacebook Google+. Originally published on Live Science.
*And oh yeah, "Good Morning".



Monday, July 10, 2017

Do you have a product or service that you wish to advertise on Instagram?

*We'd be glad to help you achieve that goal.

Welcome to the wonderful world of technology

Semi Autonomous Home / Office Defense Systems

*Allow me to take you for a ride in the state of the art semi autonomous self defending home or business. Each one of these systems is unique to the individual. How far a person wishes to go within the framework of the law is up to the individual. The supreme court is still out on a final decision.
 Nevertheless, these systems are being built and installed, don't fool yourself.


I wish I could show you the detailed specs and several mock ups yet I simply can't.


7 Best Handguns for Women [2017 Edition]

Best Tech Gifts This Year

HOTTEST STARTUP IDEAS OF 2017


We live in an era of unexampled creation of high technologies and trends, thousands of startups are founded every second, to meet the demands of consumers and enterprises. Entrepreneurs continue to dream and materialize their unique ideas based on existing technologies and offering new solutions.  Some of the trends like Internet of Things (IoT), virtual reality (VR), artificial intelligence and machine learning are one of those technologies that can revolutionize the market, bring new solutions and stimulate innovation and changes.
See also: Want to build a business on the side of your full-time job? Check out these 100+ side business ideas and get started today.
2016 was a year of outstanding innovation, especially in tech field. However, many experts predict, that 2017 will be even more brighter. New promising startups are already bringing changes to business, governments, healthcare and, well, to all human race. We’ve collected top startup trends to watch out for in 2017.

GEORGE FRIEDMAN: A US attack on North Korea is imminent



The US is preparing to attack North Korea, according to Geopolitical Futures founder George Friedman — setting the stage for a difficult, messy war with potentially catastrophic consequences.
Speaking Monday to a rapt audience at the 2017 Strategic Investment Conference in Orlando, Friedman said that while it was unlikely the US would take action before President Donald Trump returns home at the weekend, North Korea's actions appeared to have "offered the US no alternative" to a clash.
According to Geopolitical Futures analysis, evidence is mounting that the enmity between the two is escalating to a point where war is inevitable.
Friedman said that on May 20, the USS Carl Vinson supercarrier and USS Ronald Reagan were both within striking distance of North Korea.
Additionally, more than 100 F-16 aircraft are conducting daily exercises in the area, a tactic that foreshadowed the beginning of Desert Storm in 1991.
F-35 aircraft have also been deployed to the area, and US government representatives are expected to brief Guam on civil defense, terrorism, and Korea on May 31.
All of these strategic moves telegraph one outcome — conflict.
Friedman's decision to make public his focus on North Korea comes days after the secretive state's latest ballistic missile launch. The UN Security Council condemned its "highly destabilizing behavior and flagrant and provocative defiance" of the organization.

Seoul in the crosshairs

Problems with any conflict are myriad. The 25 million people of the Seoul metropolitan area lie in reach of what Friedman called a "stunning mass of [North Korean] artillery." Any strike on North Korea would likely result in a retributive attack on Seoul.
"We cannot afford the kind of casualties this will create," Friedman said, adding that the US needed to neutralize the artillery by strategic bombardment.
A second problem for the US is that any conflict would necessarily rely on imperfect intelligence, and the effect of incorrect information could take a devastating human toll.
Friedman also called attention to Andersen Air Force Base in Guam, saying that a North Korean attack on the base would be Kim Jong Un's only chance at delaying the war.
Pointedly branding the North Korean elites "neither crazy nor stupid," Friedman said they had "homicidal, but not suicidal tendencies."
"We are facing a war that is not simple," he said, adding that Russia and China were both washing their hands of the matter.

An undeclared war?

In off-the-cuff remarks following his speech at the SIC 2017, Friedman said a conflict would mark the beginning of another undeclared war.
"We have not declared war on a country since World War II, a terrible mistake morally and constitutionally, but also practically," he said. "Getting Congress to declare war binds both sides together and puts responsibility on all."
Nonetheless, he said, North Korea is America's problem to bear.
"This is how it's going to be for America over the next decade, because we are the major global power and that power is of the sort that doesn't disappear very quickly," he said. "We are the only country in the world with a global military capability.
"There is no other power that can conceivably — and I include the Chinese in this — take effective military action against the North Koreans to stop a nuclear program," he continued. "That means it's either the US [takes action] or North Korea has a nuclear weapon."

Systemic war will come to the 21st century

Rumors of the demise of America's hegemonic status are greatly exaggerated, according to Friedman. A consequence of its unparalleled power is that it will continue to "be involved in all sorts of miserable wars every five to 10 years. It's partly because no one else wants to do it and partly because we can afford to and partly because of long-term threats."
As for the remainder of the 21st century, Friedman was pragmatic.
"Every century has its systemic wars," he said. "The odds that the 21st century will be the first not to have it are slim to none."
For the foreseeable future, it seems, the US's reluctant sheriff's hat will remain in place.
Get live updates from the sold-out 2017 Strategic Investment Conference.
Don't miss out as some of the world's leading asset managers, geopolitical experts, and Federal Reserve insiders, including John Mauldin, George Friedman, and Ian Bremmer, discuss how to assemble a winning portfolio for the Paradigm Shifts now destabilizing the world. Tune in here.
Read the original article on Mauldin Economics. Copyright 2017.

What's in the Senate health care bill? Here are five key provisions

Interactive >

Shortly before Senate Republicans released their bill to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, we asked several health policy analysts for the aspects of the bill that they would be paying close attention to. They came up with five key issues to watch.
Now that the bill is officially out, we know how the Senate bill addressed those five issues, with reaction from some of our experts.
Here’s a rundown.
How, and how quickly, will the bill shrink Medicaid enrollment?
As it turns out, one of the bill’s biggest impacts will be on Medicaid, both for people who qualified for Medicaid coverage prior to the Affordable Care Act and for those who secured coverage due to the program’s expansion under President Barack Obama’s signature health care law.
Medicaid enrollment will fall a little less quickly than it would under the House bill, but new restraints on the program will be severe.
"The bill ramps down funding for Medicaid expansion over a three-year period from 2021 to 2023," said Christine Eibner, a senior economist with Rand Corp. "It also converts federal funding for the Medicaid program to a per capita allotment or, if states prefer, a block grant. All of these provisions have the effect of reducing federal funding for the Medicaid program, which likely means that states will reduce eligibility."
Then, after 2024, federal funding for Medicaid under the Senate proposal will grow more slowly than it would under the House bill, due to a change in the inflation measures used to calculate funding allotments. "This could lead to steeper reductions in enrollment over the long run," Eibner said, although these effects might not show up in the 10-year window that the Congressional Budget Office uses as its primary measurement.  
In the meantime, under the Senate bill, some of the currently mandated benefits under Medicaid would be made optional.
What will happen to existing consumer regulations governing private health insurance?
The Senate bill maintains many of the Affordable Care Act’s market regulations for private insurance, including the requirement that insurers offer coverage to all customers, and the requirement that insurers charge the same premiums regardless of health status. The bill also retains the essential health benefits requirements, which stipulate that plans must offer coverage for 10 commonly-used services, such as hospitalization, prescription drugs, maternity care, and mental health treatment.
However, the bill opens the door to a weakening of some of these provisions. States can opt out of some of the requirements if they apply to the federal government for a waiver -- and "there will be intense pressure for state regulators" to do so, said Linda Blumberg, a senior fellow at the Urban Institute.
If states seek waivers in large numbers and the federal government grants them, it would "effectively leave people with preexisting conditions without access to the services they need," said Timothy Jost, an emeritus law professor at Washington & Lee University.
Another area that could change are standards for out-of-pocket maximums -- that is, caps on how much a patient is responsible for on an annual or a lifetime basis. These caps were banned by the Affordable Care Act because people with particularly expensive conditions could be forced into bankruptcy by their medical costs.
The Senate bill raises the ratio for premiums that insurers can charge older and younger customers. Currently, older customers can get charged three times what younger customers pay. The bill would increase this ratio to five-to-one.
However, insurers’ options for covering their costs will be limited in other ways. The Senate bill eliminates the Affordable Care Act’s individual mandate, bars denial of coverage, and prevents insurers from charging people with health problems more than healthy people of the same age.
So, to make sure their pools of customers aren’t over-filled with patients at a higher risk of getting sick, insurers "will look to protect themselves by selling coverage with much more limited benefits and much higher cost sharing," Blumberg said. "This hurts the non-wealthy the most, as well as people when they have a health problem and as they get older."
James Winkler, a retired physician, waves a placard during a protest in Denver on June 23, 2017, targeting the Republican health bill. More than 100 protesters crowded the sidewalk outside the building in which Sen. Cory Gardner, R-Colo., has his office. (AP/David Zalubowski) 
What, if any, subsidies will be offered for the purchase of private coverage?
Currently, people who have purchased insurance on the Affordable Care Act marketplaces can get two forms of subsidies. One form, called premium tax credits, reduces a customer’s monthly payments for coverage. The other, known as a cost-sharing subsidy, keeps down patients out-of-pocket costs for doctor or hospital services.
The Senate bill would eliminate cost-sharing subsidies entirely. It does keep tax credits, but the maximum income to qualify for tax credits is reset for 350 percent of the federal poverty level -- about $42,000 for a single individual -- which is lower than the 400 percent under current law.
Equally important, through complicated adjustments to the formula, the Senate bill would reduce how much of a punch the the tax credits pack for enrollees. In essence, the tax credits under the Senate bill would be pegged to the cost of a less generous insurance plan than under current law.
Stan Dorn, a senior fellow at the Urban Institute, said one of the areas in which the changes will be most clearly felt are in deductibles. For many people who buy insurance on the marketplaces, their out-of-pocket costs will go up, even if their premiums go down.
"A lot of the complaints about Obamacare have been that the deductibles are too high, but this bill will make it a lot worse," Dorn said. On balance, younger people may benefit from the tax credit changes made by the Senate bill, but older people will be worse off, he said.
The result of all these changes, Dorn said, could be that "a lot of people will drop their coverage."
What will be done to address the costs of mental health and substance use?
On the upside, the bill includes $2 billion to combat the opioid crisis, to be spent between 2017 and 2019. The downside? Experts expect that amount to be a drop in the bucket compared with the cumulative reductions for substance abuse and mental health prompted by the Senate bill.
The Senate bill allows states to waive the essential health benefits requirement -- a list that includes mental health and substance abuse treatment. Any cutbacks to Medicaid in particular could hit mental health and substance abuse treatment hard. "Medicaid is one of the key supports for substance abuse disorders," Dorn said.
How fast will taxes imposed by the Affordable Care Act be eliminated?
The Senate bill eliminates most of the taxes in the Affordable Care Act. (The major exception is the "Cadillac tax" on high cost health plans, which the Senate bill retains but delays until 2026.)
Here’s a rundown of some of the higher-profile taxes in the Affordable Care Act and how they would fare under the Senate bill.
• Tanning-bed tax: Repealed on Sept. 30, 2017.
• The ACA’s curb on deducting insurance-executive pay in excess of $500,000: Repealed in 2017.
• Medicare unearned-income tax: Repealed in 2017.
• Health insurance provider fee: Already suspended for 2017; would be repealed thereafter.
• Tax on branded prescription drugs: Repealed in 2018.
• Medical device tax: Repealed in 2018.
• A 0.9 percent Medicare payroll tax surcharge for individuals earning more than $200,000 a year or $250,000 for joint returns: Repealed effective 2023.

Are you planning a move?

**If you're planning a move outside your state or country, it may be wise to do a little research on the cost of living, crime, pollution, traffic, quality of life, health care and you can also contribute.
 All in all, it's a pretty nice deal.

Viewers Wish for Trump's Assassination After 'Scandal' Winter Premiere

*Don't take this post wrong, I don't like any presidents and not a lot of people.



After a long delay, ABC's Scandal returned for its sixth season premiere on Thursday night, fast-forwarding to election night after ending season five in the middle of a presidential campaign between "Republican" First Lady Mellie Grant(Bellamy Young) and Democrat Francisco "Frankie" Vargas (Ricardo Chavira).
To accommodate lead actress Kerry Washington’s pregnancy, the premiere moved from its usual fall date to a January 2017 start even though it was filmed in July 2016. In fact, the premiere was bumped back another weekwhen ABC decided it wanted to air a special on President-elect Trump the night before his inauguration instead. Considering the content of the premiere, this was a wise move.
The episode “Survival of the Fittest,” begins with Mellie narrowly losing to Frankie, breaking liberal feminist heartsall over again with the sight of another woman conceding an election, but the drama really kicks up when President-elect Vargas is assassinated while giving his acceptance speech. Immediately after it was announced that Vargas had been killed, there was an explosion of tweets from the nastier parts of Twitter wishing it had been Trump.
Showrunner Shonda Rhimes as well as the other actors went on record to insist that the real life election had nothing to do with the episode, but it's still worth noting that many key figures from Shondaland publicly supported Hillary Clinton in the election and went so far as to film an ad for her campaign. And of course there was the despicable Trump-like character from last season. The show can’t seem to escape even subtle references, whether it be Mellie’s logo resembling Hillary’s or the prophetic comment on a woman losing the election.
With Scandal's long history of supporting leftist causes, it's no wonder so many of its fans are members of the deranged left who wish our president dead.

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