Names You Need To Know In 2011: Addiction ‘Cure’ Baclofen - Caroline Howard - Social Medea - Forbes
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Forbes: Names You Need to Know in 2011: Baclofen
Collapse
X
-
Forbes: Names You Need to Know in 2011: Baclofen
It's just a nomination and contains no new info., but it's a nice bit of "spreading the word" article.
Names You Need To Know In 2011: Addiction ‘Cure’ Baclofen - Caroline Howard - Social Medea - Forbes* * *
Tracy
?Our freedom can be measured by the number of things we can walk away from.?
- Vernon HowardTags: None
-
Forbes: Names You Need to Know in 2011: Baclofen
Hmmmm...so they're finally getting the word out on some of these meds. That's good news, because right now I feel like I know more than every doctor I've seen about meds, side effects, and effectiveness!
Comment
-
Forbes: Names You Need to Know in 2011: Baclofen
You probably DO know more than your doctor about many medical issues. During my last visit after my doctor gave me this years flu shot he said to me, "This protects you from H1N1 even". I answered..."Oh...well good, but I hear it has recently mutated to a new strain...". He answered, so honestly and transparently, "Oh, well you are probably more up on all this than I am". I read it on Reuters news a couple days before, but my doctor works 14 hours a day and doesn't have the time to keep up. And that, my friends, is the way it is.
So....be proud that you know more that your doctor. Let him know that you know and he will follow YOUR lead, just as mine does, because he looks up what I say after I say it and I have earned his respect!
This is the way life works, friend! Really! Perhaps sad, but true! So KOKO---keep on keeping on and maybe you and me can change the world!
Cheers--------------------------------------------------
Dab
KOKO my friends! "Keep On Keeping On" your Baclofen journey.
:h
Comment
-
Forbes: Names You Need to Know in 2011: Baclofen
Here is the article. I can't find the comments either....
Baclofen may just be the little pill that could prevent the deaths of the approximately two million people around the world who die from the effects of alcohol each year, according to the World Health Organization. Not to mention countless lost jobs and productivity hours, failed marriages and children born with defects.
Expect to hear a lot more about baclofen.
Or just ask Olivier Ameisen, M.D., cardiologist at New York Hospital-Cornell University Medical College, L?gion d’Honneur medalist for his “contribution to the image of France abroad and to cardiology,” friend of Elie Wiesel and recovered alcoholic.
Despite running a thriving medical practice, he had become a binge drinker, notes The Guardian in a May 2010 profile, and by 1997 was regularly being admitted to the hospital. He tried the five As of alcohol treatment: Antabuse, antidepressants, acupuncture and Alcoholics Anonymous–plus hypnosis, Valium and yoga.
Along came baclofen. The anti-spasticity medication (brand names Kemstro and Lioresal) was earlier touted as an antidote for cocaine abusers in a study by the UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute.
No medication is considered a “cure” by addiction experts, treatment centers such as Hazelden, self-help groups like AA and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Most find or advocate that medication (in appropriate cases) plus substance abuse counseling coupled with a spiritual awakening can reduce or eliminate use.
But Dr. Ameisen, author of The End of My Addiction: How One Man Cured Himself of Alcoholism, says that baclofen, used off-label and in high doses, can cure all addictions, including alcohol, cocaine, heroin, smoking, bulimia and anorexia, compulsive shopping and gambling. It’s the muscle relaxant aspect of the medication. It loosens the hold of panic attacks and obsessive thinking.
The positive effects of baclofen on Dr. Ameisen were swift and specific: “It controlled my anxiety better than any of the standard anti-anxiety medications,” he told The Guardian. “It reduced my craving for alcohol and enabled me to remain abstinent for longer periods.” Eventually, “I was completely and effortlessly indifferent to it [alcohol].”
Dr. Ameisen is clearly a case of a highly motivated and engaged patient. The real test will be acceptance as part of treatment plans by the medical and substance abuse treatment communities.
Baclofen is slowly but surely gaining momentum and approval from the medical community. Dr. Ameisen’s proselytizing has built a network of believers among his fellow physicians, from notables at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center to the McLean Hospital Division of Alcohol and Drug Abuse of Harvard University.
In the most recent news from this month: A study out of Minnesota indicates that baclofen is effective in treating symptoms of alcohol withdrawal syndrome.--------------------------------------------------
Dab
KOKO my friends! "Keep On Keeping On" your Baclofen journey.
:h
Comment
Comment