The problem with many people today is they try to do things without thinking about the consequences. They are not as careful as they used to be. For instance, in the past, parents, specifically, mothers were very nurturing and caring. They put in so much effort just to make sure that their child gets the best of everything. For pregnant women, they try their best to make sure that they are healthy so their child will be so too.
But at present, it is so saddening that things have changed. In Ireland, A baby is born suffering from alcohol or drug withdrawal symptoms once every three days because the mother drank heavily during pregnancy or was addicted to drugs. Figures obtained by the Irish Examiner show the scale of the hidden health crisis, despite repeated HSE and Tusla public awareness campaigns. Click the link to read more. Details released under the Freedom of Information Act show that between 2014 and 2017, doctors diagnosed a newborn baby suffering withdrawal from addiction to alcohol or drugs (legal or illegal) 485 times. The HSE — whose figures do not include emergency department or outpatient cases, meaning the true rate is likely to be far higher — declined to provide a hospital-by-hospital or county-by-county breakdown to protect the identities of the families involved. Similarly, officials declined to detail the exact annual figures for certain categories in some years, for the same reason.
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In Ireland for example, they have 730 drug-related deaths in a year. Fatalities linked to drug use reached a new high in 2016, with 736 people losing their lives. The figure is an increase of one death in 2015 (735), but the two years together represent a peak since records began in 2014. The figure for drug-related deaths — equating to more than two people a day — compares to road fatality figures of 186 in 2016 (148 in 2018). Click
The number of deaths from alcohol, drugs, and suicide in 2017 hit the highest level since federal data collection started in 1999, according to an analysis of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data by two public health nonprofits. The national rate for deaths from alcohol, drugs, and suicide rose from 43.9 to 46.6 deaths per 100,000 people in 2017, a 6 percent increase, the Trust for America's Health and the Well Being Trust reported Tuesday. That was a slower increase than in the previous two years, but it was greater than the 4 percent average annual increase since 1999. Click the link to
Just like this committee that has been created to help fight drug addiction in the community. The Brant County Health Unit has recorded a significant reduction in opioid-related deaths, overdoses and emergency visits since the launch of the Brantford-Brant Community Drugs Strategy. Click
Just like with Hindsdale family who shares their own struggle and the
In Albany, 14 new recovery centers will be put up in order to help those people who are suffering from their drug addiction. This is funded by the New York state. The state's Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services announced Friday that it would award more than $5 million to support the new centers. For more information, click
In Singapore, drug users will be given help by the Government to kick their addiction, regardless of their socio-economic background, Law and Home Affairs Minister K Shanmugam said in Parliament on Friday (Mar 1). Mr. Shanmugam was speaking during the Committee of Supply debate in response to Workers’ Party Chief Pritam Singh, who earlier raised concerns that the recent changes to the Misuse of Drugs Act may inadvertently operate in favor of drug abusers from affluent households. Click