Sentences with phrase «with addiction often»

With addiction often comes feelings of betrayal on the part of the addict's partner.
«Family and friends of those struggling with addiction often feel helpless and the worst case scenario of a fatal overdose is always looming,» said Sherlita Amler, MD, Commissioner of Health, who writes the standing orders that cover the prescriptions needed for the county to participate in the New York State Opioid Overdose Prevention Program.

Not exact matches

Shopaholics often report that buying a new dress or outfit provides a temporary confidence boost; some people with shopping addictions also suffer from self - esteem and insecurity issues.
Just about every illegal drug can be used in a medicinal way, often with less danger from side effects or addiction than legal drugs.
For many, the preconditions for addiction begin early — a childhood trauma or an early start with pornography often resonates into adulthood.
Pornography is often not recognised as compulsive until someone fails to stop, but with no warning that this can become an addiction, many will have no idea how much their brain has been rewired, and how difficult stopping will be.
But their struggles often have nothing to do with the trauma of affairs, addictions or abuse.
There are many other writers who have taken a crack at definitions — often with an apparent attempt to attack religion, Christianity, Alcoholics Anonymous, the «recovery industry,» addiction medicine, treatment programs, certain scholars, certain historians, and many other kinds of targets.
Oliver's take down of issues often ignored by news outlets — like prescription drug addiction and pay day lending — exposed corruption and injustice with 30 - minutes investigations that were as informative as they were funny.
And it often begins with the mystery of no image, or label or definition, keeping us floating, until we are free of the addiction / tendency towards projection / perception / false control.
Jared often complains that he doesn't get enough «play» on My Baking Addiction, so this Chocolate Stout Cake post is devoted to him and his unfortunate encounter with pink eye.
This is an incredibly difficult question to answer for a variety of reasons, most importantly because over the years our once vaunted «beautiful» style of play has become a shadow of it's former self, only to be replaced by a less than stellar «plug and play» mentality where players play out of position and adjustments / substitutions are rarely forthcoming before the 75th minute... if you look at our current players, very few would make sense in the traditional Wengerian system... at present, we don't have the personnel to move the ball quickly from deep - lying position, efficient one touch midfielders that can make the necessary through balls or the disciplined and pacey forwards to stretch defences into wide positions, without the aid of the backs coming up into the final 3rd, so that we can attack the defensive lanes in the same clinical fashion we did years ago... on this current squad, we have only 1 central defender on staf, Mustafi, who seems to have any prowess in the offensive zone or who can even pass two zones through so that we can advance play quickly out of our own end (I have seen some inklings that suggest Holding might have some offensive qualities but too early to tell)... unfortunately Mustafi has a tendency to get himself in trouble when he gets overly aggressive on the ball... from our backs out wide, we've seen pace from the likes of Bellerin and Gibbs and the spirited albeit offensively stunted play of Monreal, but none of these players possess the skill - set required in the offensive zone for the new Wenger scheme which requires deft touches, timely runs to the baseline and consistent crossing, especially when Giroud was playing and his ratio of scored goals per clear chances was relatively low (better last year though)... obviously I like Bellerin's future prospects, as you can't teach pace, but I do worry that he regressed last season, which was obvious to Wenger because there was no way he would have used Ox as the right side wing - back so often knowing that Barcelona could come calling in the off - season, if he thought otherwise... as for our midfielders, not a single one, minus the more confident Xhaka I watched played for the Swiss national team a couple years ago, who truly makes sense under the traditional Wenger model... Ramsey holds onto the ball too long, gives the ball away cheaply far too often and abandons his defensive responsibilities on a regular basis (doesn't score enough recently to justify): that being said, I've always thought he does possess a little something special, unfortunately he thinks so too... Xhaka is a little too slow to ever boss the midfield and he tends to telegraph his one true strength, his long ball play: although I must admit he did get a bit better during some points in the latter part of last season... it always made me wonder why whenever he played with Coq Wenger always seemed to play Francis in a more advanced role on the pitch... as for Coq, he is way too reckless at the wrong times and has exhibited little offensive prowess yet finds himself in and around the box far too often... let's face it Wenger was ready to throw him in the trash heap when injuries forced him to use Francis and then he had the nerve to act like this was all part of a bigger Wenger constructed plan... he like Ramsey, Xhaka and Elneny don't offer the skills necessary to satisfy the quick transitory nature of our old offensive scheme or the stout defensive mindset needed to protect the defensive zone so that our offensive players can remain aggressive in the final third... on the front end, we have Ozil, a player of immense skill but stunted by his physical demeanor that tends to offend, the fact that he's been played out of position far too many times since arriving and that the players in front of him, minus Sanchez, make little to no sense considering what he has to offer (especially Giroud); just think about the quick counter-attack offence in Real or the space and protection he receives in the German National team's midfield, where teams couldn't afford to focus too heavily on one individual... this player was a passing «specialist» long before he arrived in North London, so only an arrogant or ignorant individual would try to reinvent the wheel and / or not surround such a talent with the necessary components... in regards to Ox, Walcott and Welbeck, although they all possess serious talents I see them in large part as headless chickens who are on the injury table too much, lack the necessary first - touch and / or lack the finishing flair to warrant their inclusion in a regular starting eleven; I would say that, of the 3, Ox showed the most upside once we went to a back 3, but even he became a bit too consumed by his pending contract talks before the season ended and that concerned me a bit... if I had to choose one of those 3 players to stay on it would be Ox due to his potential as a plausible alternative to Bellerin in that wing - back position should we continue to use that formation... in Sanchez, we get one of the most committed skill players we've seen on this squad for some years but that could all change soon, if it hasn't already of course... strangely enough, even he doesn't make sense given the constructs of the original Wenger offensive model because he holds onto the ball too long and he will give the ball up a little too often in the offensive zone... a fact that is largely forgotten due to his infectious energy and the fact that the numbers he has achieved seem to justify the means... finally, and in many ways most crucially, Giroud, there is nothing about this team or the offensive system that Wenger has traditionally employed that would even suggest such a player would make sense as a starter... too slow, too inefficient and way too easily dispossessed... once again, I think he has some special skills and, at times, has showed some world - class qualities but he's lack of mobility is an albatross around the necks of our offence... so when you ask who would be our best starting 11, I don't have a clue because of the 5 or 6 players that truly deserve a place in this side, 1 just arrived, 3 aren't under contract beyond 2018 and the other was just sold to Juve... man, this is theraputic because following this team is like an addiction to heroin without the benefits
Domestic violence, maternal depression, and addiction plague many home visiting participants, which often makes effective intervention with those families challenging for home visiting professionals.
None of this takes into account the hidden costs often associated with legalized gambling, including increases in personal bankruptcy and addiction, which according to McGowan, tends to afflict both the elderly and those between 18 and 25 years old.
Jamieson wants to provide heroin - assisted treatment to users who have failed to respond to other forms of treatment, in order to deprive organised crime of funds and to break the cycle of acquisitive crime that can often go hand in hand with addiction.
«This was particularly busy time — often with multiple events in a day — when the governor was negotiating a landmark end - of - session package in Albany to fight heroin addiction and breast cancer, crack down on zombie homes and release much - need money to build supportive housing for the homeless,» Azzopardi stated.
All too often, addiction starts with the medicine cabinet and ends in tragedy.»
Like many drugs in new indications, its effect was discovered by accident: researchers knew that quitting smokers were often depressed, and so they began experimenting with the drug as a means to alleviate depression, not addiction.
Based on this idea, a non-addictive morphine derivative called buprenorphine (often prescribed to treat pain or opiate addiction) is now being tested in suicidal people with good early results.
Unlike other parasomnias, NSRED often resembles a serious addiction, with sufferers frequently getting up several times a night.
Depression, addiction, and especially trauma are very common and often devastating for women living with HIV but are not being effectively addressed by most clinics.
«If the brain's neural - activity patterns are in overdrive, as is often the case for people with addiction or OCD, could we create a computer program that can help to retrain their brains and downshift this activity?»
Dr. Vozoris said sleeping pills are already used too often and associated with a number of serious side effects, including addiction, overdose, car accidents and falls.
This is unique because this addiction would not be a result of irrationality or a lack of impulse control, as is often associated with addiction.
Often used to help people with opioid addiction, kratom (which can be bought online or in a vending machine) has caused at least 36 deaths because the product is unregulated and being used without instruction.
People who have struggled with weight issues, stress, toxic relationships, addictions or other personal issues are often able to finally resolve these issues once their body is correctly aligned, connected and stronger and they start to feel more empowered.
«Cravings and addictions have to do with not being in the present moment, and often not wanting to be.
Yes, I can help, but when there's an addiction, and there often is with processed carbohydrates, it really comes down to us HAVING A REASON TO STOP, THEN MAKING A PLAN, AND STICKING TO THE PLAN BECAUSE YOU BELIEVE IN THE REASONS.
«You deal with your issues of addiction, often physical injuries or illness, community living, being away from home and family and friends and the sometimes overwhelming stress of deeply examining your life.
Dopamine [6] is often associated with pleasure and addiction but, in reality, this is actually a very complicated hormone.
It will empower you with moral strength necessary to overcome long - cultivated bad habits or addictions often impossible to defeat on our own.
Often, the person finds another addictive substance, or just continues rewarding the brain with sugar, maintaining addiction.
it sometimes astonishes me how often i wear kate spade - and yes, i worked there for two and a half years, but i sometimes think my addiction is a little excessive... but then again, kate keeps bringing out adorable clothes (like this dress which i just ordered) so i just have to accept the fact i will forever be indebted to miss spade herself and i'm okay with that.
He said where it often gets dangerous is that most of the time, the sex goes hand - in - hand with drug or alcohol addiction.
Regular Ferrara screenwriter Nicholas St. John often imbues his exploitation scripts with a deft intelligence, but in The Addiction, quoting from Sartre and Nietzche made me erupt in laughter.
Freddie begins with sex and alcohol as his master, but Lancaster and The Cause soon takes the place in the way that people recovering from addictions often turn to religion as a new form of obsessive behaviour.
More difficult is the tedium that often accompanies the addiction / recovery / relapse narrative — a problem currently up for deconstruction in Leslie Jamison's new memoir, «The Recovering,» in which the author frets that stories of sobriety get the literary equivalent of short shrift, unable to compel us the same way that stories of addiction do, with their manic highs and grand tales of misbehavior.
Like many films that focus on drug addiction, it's often difficult for a general audience to care about a character who exhibits zero redeeming moral value and spins farther into decline with every running minute.
By comparison, Jennifer Dworkin's Love and Diane — an intimate, unruly portrait of a mother / daughter relationship and of three generations of a black Brooklyn family struggling with drug addiction; HIV; poverty; a byzantine, contradictory, often inane welfare system; and the self - destructive impulses that result from anger, shame, and abandonment — seems even more admirable and involving than it did in its New York Film Festival screening last year.
The impacts of opioid addiction on schools are often indirect, revealing themselves in classroom behavior by students with family members who are addicted, are in jail, or are in recovery but still unable to care for their children.
«Paradoxical though it may seem, these ostensibly privileged youth, many of who start experimenting early and often with drinking and drugs, could well be among the groups at highest risk for alcoholism and addiction in adulthood.»
Her teen books — which deal with very difficult yet realistic subject matter such as drug addiction, suicide, and self - harm — are often found hovering near the top of the lists of books that have been banned in schools or libraries.
Many suffer from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) with full - blown depression, often leading to a downward spiral of unemployment, broken relationships, and addictions.
Clare has a strong work ethic and is adept at representing clients from all backgrounds including clients with diagnosed mental health problems, learning difficulties, substance misuse / addiction problems and parents who are often under intense emotional pressure in cases concerning their children.
However, they often help lawyers with a multitude of problems: alcoholism, drug addiction, other mental illnesses, gambling and other serious health problems.
With the advancements in technology, and the debilitating addiction to electronic devices plaguing most, the law has had to develop new causes of action to respond to the often devastating impact that the spread of private, and sometimes intimate, information can have.
The idea is similar to that of the Winnipeg Drug Treatment Court, except with the focus on mental health instead of addictions, though these can often overlap.
For clients struggling with addiction problems, we can often help you get Proposition 36, PC 1000 pretrial diversion, drug court or other treatment programs as an alternative to jail.
Social and human service organizations often work with some of the most fragile and at - risk populations, including the elderly, the homeless, low - income families, people with disabilities, victims of domestic violence, and those fighting drug and alcohol addiction.
Often, the misuse of, dependency upon and addiction to technology, like other vices, are fueled by a person's desire for an «easy fix,» or to avoid the pain associated with a past relational connection or disconnection.
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