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In reply to the discussion: Are most heroin "overdoses" a myth ? Heroin was more pure before WWII but... [View all]H2O Man
(79,048 posts)44. One of the factors
that I do not see mentioned on this thread -- which is a very good thread, by the way, and sorry if I missed someone else saying this -- is that people who abuse heroin over a long period do not tend to be in good health. This is not to suggest that everyone using heroin fits snuggly into one little group; surely, they do not. But there do tend to be some common features among those who are prone to the use and abuse of heroin (and related substances). Paying attention to their health is not one of them.
A person who has health issues, including chronic ones that may be as simple as a poor diet and/or lack of exercise, can be contributing factors in many of those deaths that are attributed to ODing on heroin.
Thanks for a good OP/thread.
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Are most heroin "overdoses" a myth ? Heroin was more pure before WWII but... [View all]
KurtNYC
Feb 2014
OP
I've read that most of the health issues are due to dirty needles and infected veins.
tridim
Feb 2014
#2
I also know of a doctor who was stealing the Schedule 2 narcs from his own shared practice
KurtNYC
Feb 2014
#6
Thats what happened to Gram Parsons too. He relapsed and couldn't handle his former dose.
Erose999
Feb 2014
#18
they affect people differently. for me a low dose simply prevents anxiety attacks.
dionysus
Feb 2014
#24
Benzos are well known for the paradoxical effect some people experience.
SaveOurDemocracy
Feb 2014
#47
People do overdose and it has to do with a unregulated dose being sold on the street.
Jesus Malverde
Feb 2014
#10
One wonders how much of drug culture is just a social construction. I mean when you hear "heroin
Erose999
Feb 2014
#31
It's already known - and reflected in the CO and WA measures passed by voters - that pot smoking
nomorenomore08
Feb 2014
#43
Some Scandanavian countries have harm reduction programs for heroin addicts that allow them to use
Warren DeMontague
Feb 2014
#41
As others have noted in the thread, relapsing is particularly dangerous for some opiate addicts.
Warren DeMontague
Feb 2014
#40
Possibly, or maybe he had stopped using and then suddenly started back at his old "dose"
ecstatic
Feb 2014
#57