Nirdosh
delivery to: 14/free 10 days/free 14-21days/$10 14-20 days/$10 14-21 days/$15 14-24 days/free 8-16 days/$20
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GenericMed
- - Nirdosh 10 pcs 8 packs
- - Nirdosh 10 pcs 8 packs
most countries
Tl-Pharmacy
- - -
- - -
10-21 days/free
every country
MedRx-One
- - -
- -
most countries
LeadMedic
$0.00 -
$0.00 -
5-7 days/$25
every country
Pharma-Doc
- - -
- -
FedEx next day/$24
USA only
Med-Pen
- - -
- -
7-14 days/$20
most countries
OurPharmacyRx
$222.00 - 10 packs x 10 pcs
$222.00 - 10 packs x 10 pcs
5-12 days/$30
most countries
RxPharms
- - -
- - -
worldwide
RxMedShop
- - -
- - -
5-9 days/$30
3-6 days/$40
most countries
FOR SOCIAL WORKERS, TEACHERS, EMPLOYERS AND MEMBERS OF THE HELPING PROFESSIONS: DIAGNOSING AND TREATING CHEMICAL DEPENDENCE
As chemical dependence spreads in our society, more and more professional people will come across the problems of addiction and alcoholism. Doctors, magistrates, social workers, solicitors, probation officers, voluntary workers, clergymen, teachers, personnel officers,
marriage-guidance counsellors, union officials – all these people have dealings with the social problems caused by drug dependence or alcoholism.
Unfortunately, many of these professions have little if any real knowledge of chemical dependence. Their training ignores the topic altogether, or puts forward out-of-date ideas about it. No wonder they as individuals find themselves baffled, upset or highly irritated when they come to deal with addicts or alcoholics.
Trying to help these people, if they are still using drugs or drinking, is truly a bewildering and maddening experience. Despite genuinely heartfelt promises and occasional periods of progress, their behaviour shows no long-term sign of change. Nor will it, unless the addict or alcoholic comes off drugs and drink altogether.
Many professional workers have had no training in recognising the problem in the first place. They may concentrate all their efforts on helping people with their behavioural or environmental problems, such as health, housing, money or family, without seeing that these stem from
drug-using or drinking.
Unfortunately, our society itself refuses to recognise the early stages of drug or drink dependence. The heroin addict with dark glasses, emaciated body and track marks down the arm is recognised as a drug addict; the middle-aged housewife on tranquillisers is not. In the same way, the meths drinker living rough is recognised as an alcoholic, but the middle-class company director whose work is erratic is simply diagnosed as suffering from ‘executive stress’.
In particular, society ignores the problems of alcoholism. While newspaper headlines about drugs are common, there is much less concern about drink. Yet for every drug addict there are twenty alcoholics in our society.
*125/116/2*



