Did you discover that illness and stress amplified the spiritual concern and needs of your interviewee? Explain your answer with examples.

Did you discover that illness and stress amplified the spiritual concern and needs of your interviewee? Explain your answer with examples.

Details:
This assignment requires you to interview one person and requires an analysis of your interview experience.
Part I: Interview
Select a patient, a family member, or a friend to interview. Be sure to focus on the interviewee’s experience as a patient, regardless of whom you choose to interview.
Review The Joint Commission resource found in topic materials, which provides some guidelines for creating spiritual assessment tools for evaluating the spiritual needs of patients. Using this resource and any other guidelines/examples that you can find, create your own tool for assessing the spiritual needs of patients.
Your spiritual needs assessment survey must include a minimum of five questions that can be answered during the interview. During the interview, document the interviewee’s responses.
The transcript should include the questions asked and the answers provided. Be sure to record the responses during the interview by taking detailed notes. Omit specific names and other personal information through which the interviewee can be determined.
Part II: Analysis
Write a 500-750 word analysis of your interview experience. Be sure to exclude specific names and other personal information from the interview. Instead, provide demographics such as sex, age, ethnicity, and religion. Include the following in your response:
1. What went well?
2. Were there any barriers or challenges that inhibited your ability to complete the assessment tool? How would you address these in the future or change your assessment to better address these challenges?
3. How can this tool assist you in providing appropriate interventions to meet the needs of your patient?
4. Did you discover that illness and stress amplified the spiritual concern and needs of your interviewee? Explain your answer with examples.

Explain one of the SCIP core measures, and how it has impacted the prevention of surgical complications. Explain why no hair removal was required for the surgical procedure. If hair removal were ordered, explain the appropriate technique.

Explain one of the SCIP core measures, and how it has impacted the prevention of surgical complications.  Explain why no hair removal was required for the surgical procedure. If hair removal were ordered, explain the appropriate technique.

 

The Surgical Care Improvement Project (SCIP), was implemented as a commitment to improving the safety of surgical patients by reducing post-operative complications. Although some surgical complications are unavoidable, surgical care can be improved through better adherence to evidence based practice.
Case Study: A 60-year old patient with a long standing history of right knee pain has been diagnosed with osteoarthritis, and has been recommended a total left knee arthroscopy to improve chronic discomfort and improve mobility.
The patient’s past medical history includes hypertension and an irregular heart rate. The patient denies any allergies.
The patient reports to the hospital at 1 p.m. for a left knee replacement. A medication reconciliation is completed, and the patient reports taking the following medications with a sip of water at 8:00 p.m.:
• Lisinopril 10 mg PO daily
• Toprol 25 mg PO daily
• Celebrex 200 mg PO daily
While in the pre-operative holding area, vital signs are taken and are within normal limits. No hair removal was performed. The patient was ordered and received Ancef 1 gram IV mini bag, at 2:30 p.m. The patient was transferred to the operating room, where anesthesia monitoring began at 3:00 p.m., a urinary catheter was placed, and a forced air warming device was placed to maintain the patient’s temperature.
After recovering in the post anesthesia care unit (PACU), the patient was transferred to a surgical floor. Post-operative orders included:
• Ancef 1 gram IV mini bag every 8 hours
• Long leg TED hose and sequential compression stockings to right leg while in bed
• Lovenox 30 mg subcutaneously every morning, starting the following morning
• Urinary catheter to be discontinued at 3:00 p.m. on post-operative day 1
The patient progressed well, both with pain control and mobility. TED hose and sequential compression stockings were worn while in bed. On the first post-operative day, the first dose of Lovenox was administered at 1000 a.m. and the last dose of Ancef was received at 2:30 p.m. The patient was able to void after removal of the urinary catheter. The patient progressed well and was discharged home on post- operative day 5.
Evidence shows that more than 45 million operative procedures are performed in the United States each year. Approximately 40% of operative procedures result in a surgical complication. The Surgical Care Improvement Project (SCIP) was implemented to improve quality of care of surgical patients, by reducing surgical complications. Nurses play an important role in this process by following and adhering to evidence based and best practice protocols.
Using evidence based practice from two professional nursing journals, and/or your nursing textbooks, answer the following questions:
1. Explain one of the SCIP core measures, and how it has impacted the prevention of surgical complications. 2. Explain why no hair removal was required for the surgical procedure. If hair removal were ordered, explain the appropriate technique.
3. What methods were used to ensure that the recommended VTE/DVT prophylaxis was implemented, and why is the timing important? Explain your rationale with evidence.
Using APA format, write a two (2) to three (3) page paper (excluding the cover and reference page) that addresses the case study. A minimum of two (2) current professional references must be provided. Current references include professional nursing publications dated within five (5) years, and/or a textbook(s) used for the course that is no more than one (1) edition old. Websites are not to be used as professional resources or references.
Compose your work using a word processor (or other software as appropriate) and save it frequently to your computer. Use a 12 font size, double space your work and use APA format for citations, references, and overall format. Information on how to use the Excelsior College Library to help you research and write your paper is available through the Library Help for AD Nursing Courses page. Assistance with APA format, grammar, and avoiding plagiarism is available for free through the Excelsior College Online Writing Lab (OWL). Be sure to check your work and correct any spelling or grammatical errors before you submit your assignment.

nurse teaches the mother of a newborn

 nurse teaches the mother of a newborn

that in order to prevent sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) the best position to place the baby after nursing is (select all that apply):
The nurse teaches the mother of a newborn that in order to prevent sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) the best position to place the baby after nursing is (select all that apply):

1. Prone
2. Side-lying
3. Supine
4. Fowler’s

Discuss the rationale for choosing the topic.

Discuss the rationale for choosing the topic.

Visit the following site http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/it

Explore healthcare techology news on CPOE, EMRs, E-prescribing, HIE, PHRs, HIT stimulus and other health IT news.
Select a “current/popular” topic of the week that may impact their practice.
Discuss the rationale for choosing the topic
How it will impact practice in a positive or negative manner
cite pros and cons
Include a discussion of how informatics skills and knowledge were used in the process relevance to developing the assignment
Conclusion – provide recommendations for the future

The paper is to be 4-6 pages in length excluding title page, introduction and reference page

What effects would joining a MCO have on your clinic regarding staffing, patient volume, and financial stability?

What effects would joining a MCO have on your clinic regarding staffing, patient volume, and financial stability?

To support your work, use your course and text readings and also use outside sources. As in all assignments, cite your sources in your work and provide references for the citations in APA format.
Start reviewing and responding to the postings of your classmates as early in the week as possible. Respond to at least two of your classmates. Participate in the discussion by asking a question, providing a statement of clarification, providing a point of view with a rationale, challenging an aspect of the discussion, or indicating a relationship between two or more lines of reasoning in the discussion. Complete your participation for this assignment by Wednesday, June 22, 2016.
MCOs
You are a new physician setting up your own practice in a new town. You are researching the different MCOs offered in your area and are considering becoming a physician for one of these networks. You have also invited the sales representatives of several health plans to speak with you about the benefits of choosing their plans.
Based on the above scenario, answer the following questions:
• What effects would joining a MCO have on your clinic regarding staffing, patient volume, and financial stability?
• What policies and procedures should be used by the MCOs to reduce costs for their clientele?
• Discuss the ethical issues or concerns about MCOs providing a lower quality of care compared to traditional fee-for-service (FFS) organizations?
• What are some of the questions you would ask each representative about his or her company’s specific plan that will help you make a decision?
• Do you believe that the evolution of MCOs and consumer driven health plans (CDHPs) has affected the healthcare environment today by integrating the financing and delivery of healthcare services? If yes, how?
• How have the roles and relationships between physicians and patients changed by each of these types of plans?

A bakery invests a portion of profits into sending its employees to a training on how to use more energy-efficient ovens that also can hold more baked goods. What goal is the bakery hoping to achieve by investing in the training?

A bakery invests a portion of profits into sending its employees to a training on how to use more energy-efficient ovens that also can hold more baked goods. What goal is the bakery hoping to achieve by investing in the training?

A bakery invests a portion of profits into sending its employees to a training on how to use more energy-efficient ovens that also can hold more baked goods. What goal is the bakery hoping to achieve
A bakery invests a portion of profits into sending its employees to a training on how to use more energy-efficient ovens that also can hold more baked goods. What goal is the bakery hoping to achieve by investing in the training?

Which endocrine disorder is consistent with Helena’s signs and symptoms? It refers you to find out the name of endocrine disorder and their symptoms consistent with Helena’s signs and symptoms.

Which endocrine disorder is consistent with Helena’s signs and symptoms? It refers you to find out the name of endocrine disorder and their symptoms consistent with Helena’s signs and symptoms.

Helena is a 51-year-old tele-marketing professional. She recently started losing weight without trying, which she found to be quite satisfying! At the same time, she also noticed that she feels quite hot when others around her do not complain of the heat.

Helena thought she was probably getting the menopause, as she knows that this is often characterised by hot flushes. She tires easily, but put this down to working long hours and getting older. None of these symptoms gave Helena any real cause for alarm. However, what made her think that there might be something wrong is the increasing amount of heart palpitations she has she can feel her heart racing quite quickly.

Helena has been feeling more anxious and suspects that this is because her fast heart rate makes her quite worried. So she decides to seek medical attention. Physical examination reveals tachycardia (a high heart rate of 109 beats per minute), hyper tension (high blood pressure of 150/90) and a high respiratory rate (22 breaths per minute). Her eyes appear somewhat wide open and there is an enlargement in the anterior (front) of her neck.

Questions

Which endocrine disorder is consistent with Helena’s signs and symptoms? It refers you to find out the name of endocrine disorder and their symptoms consistent with Helena’s signs and symptoms.
Discuss the enlargement found in Helena’s neck.
Explain why it might be possible to have low levels of thyroid‐ stimulating hormone and high levels of thyroid hormone.
Relate Helena’s symptoms to your diagnosis of the disorder? Ask you to think how you diagnose the disorder (as clinical nurse – nursing diagnosis) in relation to Helena signs and symptoms

What are ticks serial killers?

What are ticks serial killers?

 

 

Serial killers unlike mass killers kill randomly and always escape arrest. They do not want to be caught. The quest that drives serial killers has been of interest to psychologists and people in police departments. It still remains a mystery as to what makes them tick. Some of the killers who have confessed say it is an inners drive, a compelling need to see someone dead. Many a research has shown that these killers had a tormented background so that they at sometime faced parental abuse, physical or mental. Some were adopted and some lived in orphanages. However, it has been found that some grew up in pretty normal backgrounds but are listed to have had isolated childhoods so that they did not want to mingle with their fellow children. There have been other suggested ticks and they are carefully explained in the essay.

According to Scott, (2008), researched statistics show that most serial killers are between the ages of twenty to forty and are mostly white males brought up in lower or middle class family backgrounds (Scott, 2008). It has been discovered that most of these serial killers were tormented emotionally or physically by their parents and that some are not biological kids of the families they were brought up in (were adopted). Growing up, most of these children exhibit characteristics unique to normal kids such as, the love to torture pets and other small animals, pee in their beds and start fires, and these traits are known as the triad. The insistence is on most but others grew up in privileged homes enjoying the luxuries and the affection of their parents (Kerry, 2008).

They admire law enforcers and may at some point have attempted to join the police force but were denied the chances. They may have been detained even for posing as policemen and impersonating them (Scott, 2008). They choose victims that are not as strong as themselves and most of the time these victims have a stereotypic attachment to the killer. They most probably resemble a person who earlier disappointed the killer. These killers are also said to be sadists and very intelligent (Kerry, 2008).

What drives the serial killer has been widely debated even by the killers themselves. It varies with the common link being the triad. One such killer, Edmund Kemper says that the tick is usually a strong urge that grows stronger when there is an attempt to stop it (Scott, 2008). Some blame their upbringing and some say its pornography. Others say it was prison. There is no similarity in serial killers, and all are not male as says most scholars. There have been found to be younger killers even below the age of twelve and some even as old as fifty and over. Sexual needs are not the drive in all and not all are as bright. There are many drives though not all killers are driven by the same. The urge to kill may be aroused by the desire to revenge or are ticked by illusion. Some killers are driven by lust; the act of killing arouses them. This motive like most others is born during puberty. Criminologists call these killers thrill killers (Ramsland, 2006).

The family background has been said to play a big part in triggering the killer instincts. Harsh parenting has to the society been the answer with people pointing out that the upbringing of the killer would be the cause of his behavior (Scott, 2008). Often, most parents believe that being harsh will make a child tough but this puts gaps in the relationships between the child and parent. The child grows up hating the parents which leads to violent results. It leads to isolation and fantasies that are violent in nature. The kids exercise control and dominion over others upon growing up rather than being passionate. Breakups in the family also tick the killer instinct. The lack of both sets of parents when growing up creates disengagement in the minds and hearts of such children they grow up with an aloofness that triggers fantasies that lead to torture and killing (House, 2011).

The lack of a stable residence has also been found as a trigger with the art of frequent moving out creating disturbance in the minds of people. The movement may result to the killer to be living in environments that are socially ineffective. These people don’t have ample time to form close personal relationships making them lonely. The isolation creates a being that partly hates human beings and likes to see them suffering (House, 2011). Adoption may be one of the motivators of serial crimes. This is because a kid is left with an undermined sense of identity and the biological parents may have left genes that are deviant in the child. The genes may be that of a gangster or a prostitute. The thought that the child was given up for adoption due to rejection may trigger the killer instincts (Ramsland, 2006).

The other tick may be exposure to extreme violence so that such events ignite thirst for blood (Scott, 2008). If a child watched the killing of an animal such as the slaughtering of a cow, they grow up wanting to do that. If a child is tortured in their childhood, they may grow up wanting to torture others. They grow up with the sadistic attitude and they want to watch a victim enduring pain, being brave. Juvenile detention cannot be said to be the best place to reform behavior. It does anything but reform. Though sadistic behaviors in the detentions are now not tolerated, the guards triggered killer instincts through medieval forms of punishment. They beat, tortured and watched inmates being raped in the early 20th century (Ramsland, 2006). These stirred and increased the rage of inmates and when they were released, they tortured and killed. Peer rejection has also been pointed as a tick for serial crimes. Most serial killers were loners as kids, always belittled by their peers and this triggered fantasies which they could rely on.

Serial killers who first rape, torture and then kill their victims are motivated by power and aggression that is generated during puberty (Ramsland, 2006). These sexual fantasies influence the choice of the victim and the approach to use in the killing. The acts may be done in the form of rituals or may be committed out of impulse. The sexually motivated killers who kill out of impulse have no specific preferences and are most of the times not as creative and have less money. They rape and kill out of anger and power. Those who kill in ritual like manners indulge in abnormal sexual acts, have money and have specific sexual preferences (House, 2011).

Conclusion

The fascination that serial killers bring to us has no boundaries and causes us to have the quest to know what makes them tick. There is always the hope that the causes of their behaviors will be found, the factors that make them different from other humans. Unless their categories are set apart, there may never be a clear analysis about the killers. There are those that are sadists and others healthcare. They kill differently with the common behavior being the elusion of detention. They never want to turn themselves in serial killers are people as normal as any other but at one time get a trigger, may it be the memories of a torturous childhood, rage due to present torture, sexual illusions that got stirred from puberty and savage treatment in jail. There are as many causes as there are serial killers.

Effectiveness of Art Therapy for Multiple Sclerosis Patients



INTRODUCTION

Multiple sclerosis simply known as “MS” is disease, an autoimmune one; it has its affect on the central nervous system of human mind. Affected by multiple sclerosis, the brain faces a number of difficulties in getting messages to other parts of the body. Though, we know fairly little on the issue of multiple sclerosis, research into its root causes and potential treatments is swiftly developing. The researcher claim MS causes the human body’s immune system to target attack myelin, an insulating coating around nerve cells. When myelin is affected, the communication among nerve cells located in the central nervous system is interrupted. When it occurs, few of the parts of the human body do not receive or accept instructions from the central nervous system, the source of controlling everything human body does. The disease can cause dynamic range of symptoms that emerge with a range of severity, from mild distress to absolute disability.


Statement of the Problem

Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is an incurable, chronic, and disabling disease in which the immune system is believed to attack the central nervous system. Would Art therapy be proven effective for the patients of Multiple Sclerosis? In order to analyze the benefits that can be drawn out of the therapy, the researcher must be well aware of the illness, its causes and types. As for the treatment, there are various ways that can help in the phase of the healing process of the multiple sclerosis patients. It is however significant to make relationships among the vulnerabilities of the illness and the soothing benefits of the art therapy that is to be examined in this paper. Moreover, this paper provides a comparative study which to examine the effectiveness of art therapy on the patients of multiple sclerosis in two different parts of the world. U.S. and Middle East being the main focus on the study as far as the geographical setting of this paper is concerned.

The researcher’s goal is to identify the casualties and the causes of the illness known as multiple sclerosis and also acquire a better understanding of its types and the vulnerabilities that comes in the baggage. It is mainly important because to look for healing, the problem must be clear and concise. Among various methods that has been proven beneficial in the course of healing for the multiple sclerosis patients, this paper has chosen the gate of art therapy. Art therapy has been in the debate for a while when many controversial illnesses are emerged as an issue to talk about.

Art therapy has provided a gateway to many of the soothing process that can be beneficial and helpful in many illnesses. The number of ways art therapy has provided particularly to examine the variation it introduced in order to soothe the variety of vulnerable symptoms have been considered reliable and valuable.


Purpose

This study is designed to analyze the effectiveness of Art Therapy for Multiple Sclerosis patients. The researcher hypothesizes that Art Therapy will considerably improve the overall aspects required to fulfill a quality life. The paper also comprises a comparative study between United States of America and Middle East


Research Question

Does Art therapy help in any way to multiple sclerosis patients? How beneficial it is to the patients residing across U.S. and Middle East.



TYPES OF MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS

Multiple sclerosis might appear in various forms. Multiple sclerosis is an unpredictable illness. Some people have initial attacks and do not progress. Occasionally, in elderly, progression will stop altogether. According to Multiple Sclerosis Association of USA, it is not clear why this illness affects people in such a diversity of ways. The types of Multiple Sclerosis include:


Relapsing-remitting

:

Relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis short as “RRMS” is typically characterized by plainly definite attacks of aggravating neurologic functions. These attacks are medically referred to as “relapses”, break outs or exacerbations which are pursued by partial or total recovery periods such as remissions, during it the symptoms get better partially or entirely, and there is no evident progression of illness. RRMS is the common disease at the time of diagnosis. This form of MS comes and goes with time. It usually builds up in the age from 20s to 30s. Symptoms could be severe at one point of time and then disappear. About 85 % of MS patients develop onset of the disease in this pattern. Relapsing-remitting MS is defined as the provocative attacks on myelin as well as of the nerve fibers. During all those provocative attacks, activated immune cells cause few, localized areas of loss which target the symptoms of Multiple Sclerosis. Due to the reason that the location of the damage is so changeable, no two patients have exactly the same kind of symptoms.

Symptoms are very changeable in RRMS. Devastating fatigue is a common unbearable symptom. One of the initial signs of MS might include double vision or blindness that is partial blindness. Other symptoms comprise of balance issues, spasticity, and numbness. This could make walking really difficult. Some people go through bladder or bowel dysfunction, dizziness, or pain. In few cases, emotional imbalances or cognitive dysfunction may occur. Symptoms of Multiple Sclerosis tend to worsen as soon as patients become worked up. Lhermitte’s sign is an impression parallel to an electrical shock burning down from neck. Another out of the ordinary sensation, known as MS Hug, feels like a contraction around chest.


Secondary-progressive

:

The title for secondary-progressive multiple sclerosis (SPMS) comes relevant of the fact that it emerges after (RRMS). Of the 85 % of the people who were initially diagnosed with RRMS, most would sooner or later transition to SPMS, meaning that after a course of time within which they experienced relapses and remissions, disease would begin to develop more gradually (not necessarily quickly), with or without any attacks or relapses for that matter.

After the first attack, the disease might begin to develop in a more intentional way. In this type, symptoms do not collapse. Before new therapies were designed, about 50 percent of patients with MS entered a progressive stage. In SPMS, people might or might not continue to face relapses caused by inflammation; the disease steadily changes from the provocative process seen in RRMS to a much more steadily progressive stage characterized by nerve damage or loss. People with PPMS do not usually experience any attacks or relapses. With SPMS, relapses tend to be less different. They might happen less often or never occur at all. When relapses occur, recovery is not as final and complete. Disabilities stay put.

The fair reason people progress from relapse-remitting to the secondary progressive MS is not still concise and clear. It doesn’t seem related to a growing or increased immune reaction. One explanation is that the disease progression might be an after-effect of nerve damage that occurred early in disease growing phase. But more investigation is required to understand the uneven disease process.


Primary-progressive

:

Primary-progressive multiple sclerosis (PPMS) is distinguished by slow worsening of neurologic functioning, without any kind of distinctive relapses or occurrence of remission. A person’s pace of progression may differ over time with infrequent plateaus or momentary improvement — but the progression is unremitting and continuous. People who build up this form of disease generally do so afterward in life. They turn down slowly, without much of the hurdles and ups and downs. This form of illness occurs in only 15% of all patients with MS, but it is however most common type of MS in patients who develop the disease after the age of forty.

Due to this vital difference in the disease course, various criteria are used to make a precise diagnosis of PPMS. The criteria to diagnose a relapsing form of MS require confirmation of at least 2 separate areas of loss (distribution in space) in central nervous system (CNS) that occurred at different points in time period (distribution in time). In PPMS, though, there is little amount of inflammation. Rather, nerve damage dominates. Damaged nerves disrupt the transmission of nerve signals and messages. This gives a raise to neurological symptoms. Signs of scar tissue or lesions might eventually form all along the damaged nerves in the brain and also in the spinal cord.


Progressive relapsing

:

Progressive-relapsing multiple sclerosis (PRMS) is the slightest common of the four disease types. Like those with PPMS, patients having PRMS experience steadily declining neurologic function, disease progression from the very start, in addition to infrequent relapses similar to those experienced by patients with relapsing-remitting MS.

Because PRMS is progressive from beginning, it may be first diagnosed as PPMS, and then subsequently transit to PRMS when a relapse or attacks occurs. Although this disease type is progressive from the outset, each patient’s symptoms and pace of progression tend to be different. In this type of multiple sclerosis, symptoms originally progress slowly but eventually get worst over the period of time. This type of MS affects about 5% of all the patient suffering from MS. No two patients are likely to have the same kind of MS symptoms in the similar manner. Few symptoms might come and go or come out once and not ever again. A relapse can last a long or short period of time from 24 hours to multiple weeks. During a relapse or attack new symptoms may appear or old symptoms for the moment worsen. In PRMS, relapses might or might not be followed by a little recovery. However, there are no remissions whatsoever.



CAUSES

Although the root cause of multiple sclerosis is still unknown, evidence suggests that the illness may result from an environmental agent that attacks the illness in a genetically vulnerable human being. These outlines of evidence have given a raise to both environmental and genetic theories for Multiple Sclerosis.


The Environmental Theory:

Investigators and researchers have explored the likelihood that exposure to viral or bacterial contaminations, environmental toxins, exposure to sunlight, variation in temperature and humidity levels, or diet may in some manner produce or aggravate Multiple Sclerosis. To this date, no particular environmental factor or agent has been declared as the root cause of MS. Examine involving inhabitants migration support the idea that an environment element may possibly bring about danger to enhance MS. Especially; susceptibility for you to grow MS seems to be keen by simply get older involving residence ornamented by simply a number of geographical locations. People that ended up blessed within high-risk location glimpse to acquire a lower threat when they transfer as well as create residence within low-risk parts ahead of get older involving 15. In dissimilarity, people blessed within less-risk location may possibly use a dangerous when they change as well as create residence in a higher-risk position just before the age of 15 years.

Dangers of Methamphetamine


Mark Dawod

The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime has estimated that five hundred metric tons of amphetamine-type stimulants are produced, coinciding with almost twenty-five million abusers. The US government reported in 2008 that about thirteen million people over the age of twelve has used meth, with over half a million being regular users of the substance. Meth has a market price in the US of thirteen billion dollars, which corroborates with its high street price, ranging from three to four hundred dollars for a fourth of a gram. Although meth is known for its disastrous side effects such as severe damage to the brain and heart, it helps those suffering with ADHD, narcolepsy, and dietary problemy. Overall, methamphetamine is a perilous stimulant that cripples the lives of its users and bystanders. However, with strong public awareness and education regarding the drug’s deleterious effects, the dilemma of meth exploitation can be stopped.


What is meth? Where did it originate from?

Amphetamine, a dialect of the perilous methamphetamine we know today was first synthesized in Germany in 1887, however, scientists were blinded to its stimulant effects at the time. A few years later in 1893, meth was synthesized in Japan, it was not until 1919 that crystal meth was synthesized, similarly in Japan. At the time, the effects of this drug were not fully understood and were not perceived as dangerous, in turn the drug began to gain its popularity, although it did not fully take off until after the second great war. Methamphetamine was given to troops in wars such as World War II, the Korean Wars, and the Vietnam War to help them attain alertness throughout the battles, gaining an advantage over their counterparts. Additionally, methamphetamine was used during Nazi Germany as Hitler was intoxicated and enjoyed indulging in drugs. However, it was not until he sent Nazis thirty-five million pills of meth, known as Pervitin, which gave them the alertness to stay awake and focused for days at a time, they believed this pill to be just “like coffee.” Soon after World War II, biker gangs in California saw the value of this stimulant and began producing and smuggling it, resulting in them making a hefty profit as the drug was easy to produce and sell. To this day, methamphetamine is very well known and used frequently, especially in densely populated regions such as Miami and California. Methamphetamine also has very limited medical use, but is used largely by women seeking to lose weight as the drug suppresses appetite well. Methamphetamine is referred to as crystal, speed, ice, dope, whizz, chalk, and fast, just to name a few. Meth, usually used as a club drug, taken mostly at rave parties, is a poison that systematically destroys the body. “I tried it once and BOOM! I was addicted,” said a meth addict that lost all that he stood for because of this stimulant. Methamphetamine addiction is single handedly one of the toughest drug addictions to treat and results in death largely because it burns up bodily resources that can only be replenished through frequent consumption of the drug.


Who uses meth? And How?

Studies show that meth users range from thirteen years old to thirty-three users old, although typically, users are within the fifteen to twenty-two year old age gap. Concerning race, African Americans are less likely to use meth than Caucasians. Meth users are predominantly Caucasian, blue collar workers, unemployed, and studying in either high school or college. Methamphetamine is also largely used in Native American communities because the spread of addiction has been widely spread from Mexican Drug Cartels, which is one of their main access sources for the substance. Women are also more likely to consume meth compared to other stimulants like heroin and cocaine because of its appetite suppressing side effect.

Meth can be snorted, smoked, injected, and ingested; statistics concerning the different ways meth is consumed are as follows:

  • 3% injest
  • 12% snort
  • 25% inject
  • 60% smoke


How does meth affect the body, mind, relationships, and environment?

Upon the consumption of meth, the heart rate of user increases, along with their breathing patterns. Methamphetamine also releases exceedingly high levels of dopamine, 1100% more than cocaine does. This stimulant effect is also one of the main reasons that this substance is very addictive. However, with time, the brain builds a shield to the substance and the only way to get around this is by the consuming the drug more frequently and in higher doses, at this point the user is addicted and builds a reliance on the drug to feed their body resources. Short term, according to drugfreeworld.org, methamphetamine effects include the following:

  • A limited desire for food
  • Heightened heart rate, blood pressure, and body temperature
  • Dilated pupils
  • Disorganized sleeping patterns
  • Nausea
  • Abnormal behavior, possibly violent if permitted
  • Hallucinations and irritability
  • Panic and psychosis
  • Convulsions, seizures, and death

Long term, according to drugfreeworld.org, methamphetamine effects include the following:

  • Permanent damage to blood vessels, the brain, and/or the heart
  • Liver, kidney, and/or lung damage
  • If smoked, the carnage of nose tissues
  • If injects, excessive diseases
  • Malnutrition which leads to weight loss
  • Harsh tooth decay
  • Disorientation
  • Increased psychological dependence
  • Psychosis
  • Depression
  • Effects of Alzheimer’s in the brain

Methamphetamine also plays a considerably large role in disturbing relationships between family members and friends. When on meth, the drug basically controls the body, resulting in unintended physical, mental, and emotional harm. The producing of meth within the household or near others is also significantly dangerous to those near by. Through explosions, fumes, or even waste (one pound of meth results in five pounds of waste) which in turn damages the environment.


How can we lower the consumption and use of methamphetamine not used medically?

According to P.A.C.E representatives, users of methamphetamine have indicated that the drug takes complete control over their body. This is due partially because of the high levels of dopamine that is released through the consumption of the substance. However, if a community is well-educated through a program such as Meth360, methamphetamine use will drop and more awareness will spread through neighboring areas.


Conclusion

Methamphetamine is a perilous stimulant that cripples the lives of its users and those surrounding them. Although, knowing what it is, its effects, and the dangers of its consumption, along with circulation of such information, the use of this drug will decrease and the environment, along with many families coping through the addiction of a loved one, will improve.