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OPICAN study in 7 Canadian cities reveals prescription opioid abuse more prevalent than heroin
11-20-2006 · EurekAlert!A new study conducted in seven Canadian cities reveals that prescription opioids, and not heroin, are the major form of illicit opioid use. These findings raise questions about the current focus of Canada's drug control policy and treatment programs.
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- OPICAN study in seven Canadian cities reveals prescription opioid abuse more prevalent than heroin
11-20-2006 · EurekAlert!
A new study conducted in seven Canadian cities reveals that prescription opioids, and not heroin, are the major form of illicit opioid use. These findings raise questions about the current focus of Canada's drug control policy and treatment programs.
Similar news · Read more »
- Prescription opioids the predominant choice among illicit opioid users
11-20-2006 · EurekAlert!
Isolated reports have pointed to substantial increases in prescription opioid abuse. To determine the impact on usage patterns among street drug users, Fischer and colleagues analyzed data from the OPICAN study, a multisite study of drug use patterns among illicit opioid users across Canada.
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- Study reveals clean air challenge for major Asian cities
12-13-2006 · EurekAlert!
Hundreds of millions of city dwellers breathe air so polluted with chemicals, smoke and particles that it dramatically exceeds World Health Organization limits with major impacts on health and the environment.
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- Landmark Carnegie Mellon addiction study finds people underestimate power of drug cravings
02-12-2007 · EurekAlert!
A novel experiment conducted by Carnegie Mellon University Professor George Loewenstein and colleagues may explain why people try a drug, such as heroin, for the first time despite ample evidence that it is addictive. The results of the study, which are being published in the Journal of Health Economics, reveal that even longtime addicts underestimate the influence that drug cravings have over their behavior.
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- Where consumer culture doesn't quite reach
05-10-2007 · EurekAlert!
In the June issue of the Journal of Consumer Research, a important study by Tuba Üstüner (City University, London) and Douglas B. Holt (University of Oxford) explores how consumer culture is enacted in ramshackle neighborhoods on the peripheries of global cities. More than one billion people -- about 1/6 of the world’s total population -- live in these often illegal squatter neighborhoods on the outskirts of mega-cities in the developing world.
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- New plant study reveals a 'deeply hidden' layer of the transcriptome
12-27-2007 · EurekAlert!
Cells keep a close watch over the transcriptome -- the totality of all parts of the genome that are expressed in any given cell at any given time. Researchers at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies and the University of Missouri-Kansas City teamed up to peel back another layer of transcriptional regulation and gain new insight into how genomes work.
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- Study explores distinction between 'different' and 'uncool'
12-04-2007 · EurekAlert!
Just as some products reveal our aspirations, there are other products that consumers avoid, lest we be associated with a particular group. An environmentalist would never buy an SUV. Baby boomers avoid products associated with being elderly. What's the difference between products we actively avoid and those that are simply "not us?" A new study reveals an important distinction -- and also highlights the mitigating effect of social pressure.
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- NIDA research reveals subconscious signals can trigger drug craving
01-29-2008 · EurekAlert!
Using a brain imaging technology called functional magnetic resonance imaging, scientists have discovered that cocaine-related images trigger the emotional centers of the brains of patients addicted to drugs -- even when the subjects are unaware they've seen anything. The study, published Jan. 30 in the journal PLoS ONE, was funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse, part of the National Institutes of Health.
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- America may learn from Quebec's prescription drug plan
09-04-2007 · EurekAlert!
A new study published in the Milbank Quarterly finds a number of similarities between Canadian drug coverage and that of the United States, despite their publicized differences. Looking at Quebec's Prescription Drug Insurance Program and the United States' Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement and Modernization Act (MMA), the study suggests that the older Canadian plan may provide valuable insights for American decisionmakers.
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- Many NYC pharmacies fail to translate prescription labels for patients who don't understand English
04-27-2007 · EurekAlert!
Despite widespread capacity to provide prescription medication labels in languages other than English, few New York City pharmacies do so and as a result, limited-English patients face serious risk of medication error, according to a study by The New York Academy of Medicine presented today at the annual meeting of the Society for General Internal Medicine in Toronto, Ontario.
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