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Seemingly there are non-stop stories and notifications of celebrities and influencers being on a new “weight loss journey” after starting on weight loss drugs. Now, Oprah is among that cohort and it has had an impact on her relationship with WeightWatchers. But hang on a minute, doesn't WW sell weight loss drugs? Let's dig into it! Bonus: I also share my favourite purchases under $100 that have positively impacted my life! Episode show notes: http://www.fiercefatty.com/185 Support me on Ko-Fi and get the Size Diversity Resource Guide: https://ko-fi.com/fiercefatty/tiers Oprah's Top 20 Moments: https://www.oprah.com/oprahshow/oprahs-top-20-moments When Oprah Met Bob: https://www.oprah.com/health/when-oprah-met-fitness-expert-bob-greene/all Conscious Eating: What I Learned on the 21-Day Cleanse: https://www.oprah.com/omagazine/what-i-know-for-sure-oprahs-vegan-cleanse Oprah Buys 10 Percent Share In Weight Watchers, Will Join Its Board: https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2015/10/19/449929140/oprah-buys-10-percent-share-in-weight-watchers-will-join-its-board Oprah Winfrey reveals she's using a weight-loss drug: ‘Not about willpower': https://www.today.com/health/diet-fitness/oprah-winfrey-weight-loss-drug-rcna128714 Oprah Winfrey to Exit WeightWatchers Board After She Announced Use of Weight-Loss Drug: https://variety.com/2024/biz/news/oprah-winfrey-leaves-weightwatchers-board-weight-loss-drug-1235926484/ My IG post: https://www.instagram.com/p/C38_HrFJX-g/ Weight Loss Drugs Part 3 - Wegovy and Tirzepatide: https://weightandhealthcare.substack.com/p/weight-loss-drugs-part-3-wegovy-and Reader Question - What Do You Think Of Obesity Medicine?: https://weightandhealthcare.substack.com/p/reader-question-what-do-you-think The Truth About The Obesity Action Coalition: https://weightandhealthcare.substack.com/p/the-truth-about-the-obesity-action Weight Watchers Expands Their Harmful Model - Adding Prescription Drugs: https://weightandhealthcare.substack.com/p/weight-watchers-expands-their-harmful WeightWatchers Clinic: https://www.weightwatchers.com/us/clinic Noom Announces: We're Not a Diet – We're a Pill Mill?: https://weightandhealthcare.substack.com/p/noom-announces-were-not-a-diet-were So WW bought Sequence. Here is what it's like on Sequence.: https://www.reddit.com/r/weightwatchers/comments/13ynjs8/so_ww_bought_sequence_here_is_what_its_like_on/ Oprah Winfrey Reveals She Uses Weight-Loss Medication as a ‘Maintenance Tool': ‘I'm Absolutely Done with the Shaming' (Exclusive): https://people.com/oprah-winfrey-reveals-weight-loss-medication-exclusive-8414552
We revisit our conversation with Philip Eil about his book Prescription for Pain. It follows his years-long investigation into his father's old classmate: former high school valedictorian Paul Volkman, who once seemed destined for greatness after earning his MD and his PhD from the prestigious University of Chicago but is now serving four consecutive life sentences at a federal prison in Arizona.
Providence, RI-based journalist/author Philip Eil discusses his upcoming, debut novel Prescription for Pain: How A Once Promising Doctor Became the “Pill Mill Killer", plus his journey as a creator, Rhode Island news and The Washington Bridge. https://www.philipeil.comSupport the show
Dan Wise was the office manager of a Georgia pill mill. Before going to prison, he made a Hail Mary YouTube video asking for advice on how to survive a prison sentence. After serving 2 of his 5-year sentence, he re-entered the world to discover that the video had become popular & he was inspired to make a business coaching others on how to make the most of federal prison. In this episode you'll hear about life at a pill mill, thriving in prison, what a prison consultant does & the revolving door of the system.If you liked this episode, you'll also like episode 18: FELON TURNED ENTREPRENEUR PART 1Guest: https://www.youtube.com/@RDAPDAN1 | https://rdapdan.com/ | https://www.facebook.com/RDAPDan | https://www.linkedin.com/in/rdapdan/ | https://www.federalprisontime.com/daniel-wiseHost: https://www.meredithforreal.com/ | https://www.instagram.com/meredithforreal/ | meredith@meredithforreal.com | https://www.youtube.com/meredithforreal | https://www.facebook.com/meredithforrealthecuriousintrovertSponsors: https://uwf.edu/university-advancement/departments/historic-trust/ | https://www.ensec.net/
IN THE NEWS How the US Army made the world's toughest sandwich THIS WEEK'S GUEST Executive Producer and Director Chase Millsap and Executive Producer Dale King, join us to talk about their documentary, “Small Town Strong.” Filmed over four years in Portsmouth, Ohio, the one-time pill mill capital of America, “Small Town Strong” follows Dale, a former Army Intelligence Officer, who returns to his hometown after two tours in Iraq, to find it in shambles amid the growing opioid epidemic. With no one coming to save them, King starts PSKC Crossfit gym and offers job opportunities to those in recovery. Their unorthodox strategy takes on fentanyl with fitness – resulting in one of the biggest comebacks in small-town America history. RAPID FIRE Women in Army SOF resorted to buying their own armor, study finds Share your Buddy Check Week plans with us How rucking can give your walking routine a boost Special Guests: Chase Millsap and Dale King.
Facing the warzone of the opioid epidemic in rural America. Reclaiming his hometown of Portsmouth, Ohio. Forging a sustainable path to recovery through fitness.CONNECT with The Resilient Life Podcast:Instagram SUBSCRIBE Get the latest video podcast on YouTubeGet the latest audio podcastCONNECT Ryan Manion on Social Media:Facebook - Twitter - Instagram - LinkedIn LEARN about Travis Manion FoundationMEET Dale King + Chase MillsapDale King InstagramDale King LinkedInChase Millsap InstagramPSKC WebsiteSmall Town Strong
Noom has announced the start of Noom Med, a division focused on selling diet drugs. If this sounds familiar, it's because Weight Watchers just did the exact same thing. Let's talk about this. Get full access to Weight and Healthcare at weightandhealthcare.substack.com/subscribe
For this episode, we are going to Hazard, Kentucky where former physician James Chaney and his wife Lesa are found guilty of multiple counts of healthcare fraud and the illegal distribution of controlled substances.Buy Merch, Subscribe, & Follow Us!https://linktr.ee/EthicalSideEffectsFor the latest deals on affordable, trendy furniture, check out Tribesigns here! https://tribesigns.pxf.io/EthicalSide Go to https://partner.canva.com/ESEFFECTS to get started with a one-month free trial of Canva Pro today! Buzzsprout - Let's get your podcast launched! Start for FREESupport the showJune is Pride Month! Let's celebrate - any proceeds we receive through our podcast from June 1st-June 30th will be donated to the National LGBTQ Task Force. To learn more about this organizations, and many other LQBTQIA+ advocacy organizations, check out our Support the Cause page!
NYAIVU has been both humbling and rewarding - having guests discuss their deepest and darkest days so candidly while simultaneously choosing this platform to share their hard won victories and triumphs. In Ep. 030 we welcome Philip Eil, a freelance journalist based in Rhode Island, who has been at work for over a decade chronicling a story closely related to this project. Below, from Philip: “I'm writing a book about Paul Volkman, who was a pain-clinic doctor in Portsmouth from 2003 to 2005 (and for a few additional months in Chillicothe) before he was shut down by the DEA. Volkman went on trial for prescription drug-dealing in Cincinnati and was eventually sentenced to four consecutive life sentences in prison, which I believe is the longest sentence given to ANY U.S. doctor convicted of drug-dealing during the opiate epidemic. One Chicago TV-news station dubbed him the "Pill Mill Killer." Volkman went to college and medical school with my dad, and I've been working on this story since 2009. I wrote a magazine article about the case in 2017 (https://www.cincinnatimagazine.com/features/pill-mill-portsmouth/), but there's much, much more to the story. My book is currently tentatively scheduled for publication in Spring of 2024.” Not Your Average IV User is discoverable almost everywhere you listen to podcasts. You can help us out by telling all the people you love that this project exists.
Pandemic Covid Lies, STD Surge & Huge Pill Mill BustSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Convicted of Acting as a Pill Mill & Doubling as an Insurance Fraud Scheme In UNITED STATES OF AMERICA v. PATRICK EMEKA IFEDIBA, NGOZI JUSTINA OZULIGBO, Nos. 20-13218, 20-13303, United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit (August 25, 2022) Patrick Ifediba and Ngozi Justina Ozuligbo appealed their convictions for health care fraud and related crimes. Ifediba, a physician, operated a clinic called CCMC and employed Ozu-ligbo, a licensed practical nurse, there. Convicted of Acting as a Pill Mill & Doubling as an Insurance Fraud Scheme The evidence at trial showed that CCMC prescribed large quantities of opioids to patients who had no medical need for them and ran an allergy-testing and treatment scheme in which it required insured patients to undergo allergy testing and prescribed them medication despite their negative allergy tests. The clinic billed Medicare and private insurers for the tests and treatments. Ifediba and Ozuligbo were indicted on substantive counts of health care fraud, conspiracy to commit health care fraud, money laundering of the clinic's unlawful proceeds and conspiracy to commit that crime. Ifediba was indicted for unlawfully distributing controlled substances for no legitimate medical purpose and for operating CCMC as a "pill mill" to distribute the controlled substances to patients who had no medical need for them. After a three-week trial featuring testimony by CCMC patients, medical experts, and law enforcement officials, the jury convicted Ifediba and Ozuligbo on all counts. The court sentenced Ifediba to 360 months of imprisonment and Ozuligbo to 36 months. BACKGROUND CCMC Operated as a Pill Mill and Required Insured Patients to Undergo Allergy Testing and Treatment. Ifediba and his wife, Uchenna Ifediba ("Uchenna"), also a physician, were the only physicians at CCMC. Neither Ifediba nor his wife specialized in pain-management medicine, but they wrote many prescriptions for controlled substances-opioids. CCMC attracted patients who were willing to wait over three hours in a dirty, crowded waiting room to receive prescriptions for controlled substances. Besides its opioid distribution, CCMC roped patients who had insurance into an allergy fraud scheme. The scheme was a simple one. Every insured patient who came to CCMC had to fill out a questionnaire on allergy symptoms before seeing the doctor. No matter the patient's answers, an allergy technician performed a skin-prick allergy test on the patient. Regardless of whether the test results were positive or negative, Ifediba prescribed immunotherapy to treat allergies and directed the technicians to order the medication. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/barry-zalma/support
This episode is also available as a blog post: https://youarewithinthenorms.com/2022/07/05/free-at-last-free-at-last-great-god-almighty-rajendra-bothra-is-free-at-last-2/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/norman-j-clement/support
This episode is also available as a blog post: https://youarewithinthenorms.com/2022/07/03/supreme-court-throws-out-conviction-of-second-mobile-al-doctor-in-so-called-pill-mill-case/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/norman-j-clement/support
This episode is also available as a blog post: https://youarewithinthenorms.com/2022/06/17/what-is-a-pill-mill-a-non-existent-entity/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/norman-j-clement/support
Retired agent Kurt McKenzie reviews Operation Oxy Alley, a multi-agency investigation of pill mill clinics illegally distributing pain killers. Christopher and Jeffrey George, twin brothers, operated, managed and financed pain management clinics in Broward and Palm Beach Counties in Florida. The four clinics prescribed more than twenty million pills and profited more than $40 million. It was the first large-scale investigation to target pill mills as an act of organized criminal conspiracy. The investigation resulted in the convictions of 32 individuals, including 13 doctors. Check out episode show notes, photos, and related articles. https://jerriwilliams.com/episode-251-kurt-mckenzie-pill-mill-case-operation-oxy-alley/ Buy me a coffee - https://www.buymeacoffee.com/JerriWilliams Join my Reader Team to get the FBI Reading Resource - Books about the FBI, written by FBI agents, the 20 clichés about the FBI Reality Checklist, and keep up to date on the FBI in books, TV, and movies via my monthly email. Join here. http://eepurl.com/dzCCmL Jerri Williams, a retired FBI agent, author and podcaster, attempts to relive her glory days by writing and blogging about the FBI and hosting FBI Retired Case File Review, a true crime/history podcast. Visit her website to check out her books, available as audiobooks, ebooks and paperbacks wherever books are sold. https://jerriwilliams.com/books/
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This episode is also available as a blog post: https://youarewithinthenorms.com/2021/12/25/medical-science-vs-prosecutorial-pill-mill-propaganda-and-dea-intimidation-is-before-supreme-courts-ruan-vs-united-statesbrief-of-amicus-curiae-compassion-and-choices-in-support-of-the-petit/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/norman-j-clement/support
Former U.S. Senator Johnny Isakson passed away over the weekend; And Atlanta area gynecologist was charged with running a 'pill mill' operation; And 5 Riverwood athletes signed letters of intent to play sports at the next level. #NorthFulton #Georgia #LocalNews - - - - - - The Northside Neighbor Podcast is local news for Roswell, Alpharetta, Sandy Springs, and the entire Northside. Northside Neighbor Register Here for your essential digital news. This podcast was produced and published for the Northside Neighbor by BG Ad Group on 12-21-2021 For advertising inquiries, please email j.southerland@bgadgroup.com For more information be sure to visit https://www.bgpodcastnetwork.com/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
who what when why and how it all fell down
This week, Tina is joined by the Dean of Nursing for Samuel Merritt University, Dean Lorna. Together, they discuss several cases of providers all across the country who found themselves in trouble after working at so-called 'pill mills'. They close the show with Tina interviewing Dean Lorna, who tells us all about her fascinating career leading up to becoming the Dean of Nursing for such a prestigious school. Please support our show by supporting our sponsors! Thank you to Trusted Health for sponsoring this episode. Please go to https://www.trustedhealth.com/gnbn and fill out a profile to help support our podcast and see what opportunities are out there for you! Thank you to our new sponsor Samuel Merritt University. If you're interested in getting more information on their MSN and DNP programs and scholarships visit them at https://smumsn.com and show them how much you appreciate them for sponsoring our podcast! Thank you to CBD Stat for continuing to sponsor our podcast! If you're interested in CBD, go to https://www.cbdstat.care/goodnursebadnurse and check them out! And of course our latest sponsor, Eko! Please visit them at https://ekohealth.com and use promo code GNBN for $20 off your purchase of the new Littmann Cardiology IV stethoscope with Eko technology! Credits “BOP: Federal Inmates by Name.” Www.bop.gov, www.bop.gov/mobile/find_inmate/byname.jsp#inmate_results. FastStats - Drug Overdoses. 2019, www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/drug-overdoses.htm. Nashville Tennessean. “Feds Prosecute Tennessee Pain Clinic Workers as Drug Dealers.” The Tennessean, 16 Nov. 2016, www.tennessean.com/story/money/2016/11/22/feds-prosecute-pain-clinic-workers-as-drug-dealers/94279560/. “Nine Medical Practitioners Indicted in Conspiracy to Distribute Controlled Pain Medication as Employees of Breakthrough Pain Therapy Center in Maryville.” Www.justice.gov, 18 Mar. 2015, www.justice.gov/usao-edtn/pr/nine-medical-practitioners-indicted-conspiracy-distribute-controlled-pain-medication. “Pill Mill Owner Sentenced to 39 Years in Prison.” Www.justice.gov, 18 Mar. 2015, www.justice.gov/usao-edtn/pr/pill-mill-owner-sentenced-39-years-prison. “Pill Mill Owner Sentenced to 69 Years in Prison.” Www.justice.gov, 18 Mar. 2015, www.justice.gov/usao-edtn/pr/pill-mill-owner-sentenced-69-years-prison. Satterfield, Jamie. “Doctor for Maryville Pill Mill Draws 10-Year Prison Term.” Knoxville News Sentinel, 22 Feb. 2017, www.knoxnews.com/story/news/crime/2017/02/22/doctor-maryville-pill-mill-draws-10-year-prison-term/98268716/. ---. “East Tennessee Doctors Say Pill-Mill Charges Violate Free-Speech Rights.” Www.knoxnews.com, 22 Apr. 2016, archive.knoxnews.com/news/crime-courts/et-doctors-say-pill-mill-charges-violate-free-speech-rights-3117e459-ec3c-1d89-e053-0100007fb618-376770551.html/. ---. “Feds Prosecute Pain-Clinic Workers as Drug Dealers.” Knoxville News Sentinel, 27 Nov. 2016, www.knoxnews.com/story/news/nation-now/2016/11/22/pill-mill-drug-dealer-prosecutions/94246152/. ---. “Maryville Pill-Mill Nurse Sentenced to 54 Months in Prison.” Knoxville News Sentinel, 13 Jan. 2017, www.knoxnews.com/story/news/crime/2017/01/13/maryville-pill-mill-nurse-sentenced-54-months-prison/96551338/. USA v. Dustin Morgan. , 23 June 2013, www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/USCOURTS-tned-3_10-cr-00160/pdf/USCOURTS-tned-3_10-cr-00160-5.pdf. “USA v. Sandra Kincaid, Randy Kincaid, Wendi Henry, and Dustin Morgan.” , 2015. Wade, Wes. “Former Nurse Practitioner at Maryville ‘Pill Mill' Sentenced to Two Years in Prison.” The Daily Times, 24 Feb. 2017, www.thedailytimes.com/news/former-nurse-practitioner-at-maryville-pill-mill-sentenced-to-two-years-in-prison/article_08911449-9819-5848-b208-d30f9c60832a.html. ---. “Two Former Maryville ‘Pill Mill' Workers Sentenced on Conspiracy Charges.” The Daily Times, 21 Jan. 2017, www.thedailytimes.com/news/two-former-maryville-pill-mill-workers-sentenced-on-conspiracy-charges/article_92991883-4acf-5186-af47-59fd35cdb8b9.html.
Welcome to episode Thirty-Two of Hell Has an Exit Podcast with Bryan Alzate. On today's episode, Bryan sits down with his good friend Matty D. The two have known each other since their early teenage years - through their drug using years, and now during the best years - The recovery years. Early on in his teenage years, Matty D. wasn't too much different than your average high-schooler. He was passionate about surfing and liked to smoke weed. However, some not-so-average things were going on around him. Things that would eventually lead him down a dark path. Matty didn't exactly have the most sound role models setting good examples for him to follow. Between his stepfather being arrested for drug dealing and his aunt - who struggled with her own addiction - inviting him over her house to do drugs any time he got in trouble; it wouldn't be long before he would find himself in the thick of his own addiction. Things really took a turn for the worse when Matty's uncle introduced him to the Florida pill mill world. He would spend all of his time filling fake prescriptions and selling pills all over the country. He quickly found himself selling just about anything - pills, weed, psychedelics, cocaine, you name it. It was right around this time, that Matty got into pills himself. Before he could even see what was happeneing, Matty's life became completely consumed by his addiction. The grip was so strong that he would use for the next 10 years to come - using through the birth of his daughter and even through her being taken away from him. Listen to episode Thirty-Two to hear how, after a decade of using and going to rehab over FIFTY times, Matty was finally able to get clean and hold on to the 12 step program. Don't miss this incredible story, as their life paths cross again from young friends, to a time of salvation - when Bryan was able to step back into Matt's life as a role-model in recovery, and help him get clean at United Recovery Project. Don't miss this great episode! For more information, please visit unitedrecoveryproject.com or call tel:tel:833-999-1877 Follow on Instagram & Twitter @hellhasanexit @united_recovery @dbpodcasts Produced by dppodcast.com Music by Miles M. Davis.
A doctor caught trading prescriptions for cash leaves a trail of bodies behind. A respected anesthesiologist ran a pain-management clinic on the weekends out of a basement in Flushing Queens, New York. Each Saturday, Dr. Stan Li saw more than seventy patients a day, writing prescriptions for Oxycontin, Xanax, and other opioids. Today's episode features Charlotte Bismuth, author of Bad Medicine. Links Here's a link to the Birth of a Con Man series. Also, subscribe to the new PRETEND YouTube channel for a chance to win a t-shirt. ——- Story idea? If you have a story to share, email Javier at info [at] pretendradio [dot] org. For more episodes like this visit pretendradio.org. To get early releases and bonus episodes go to pretendradio.org/donate Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
For more information about the Voices Project, click here. For more information about the Recovery Advocacy Project, click here. For more information about Mobilize Recovery, click here. For more information about H.R. 4684 - Tyler’s Law, click here. For more information about Ryan Hampton, click here. To watch American Fix on YouTube, click here. To read Dreamland by Sam Quinones, click here. To read the Pill Mill book, click here. To contact Henry's Uncle, please email: info@henrysuncle.org. Follow Henry’s Uncle on Instagram: @henrys_uncle. For more information about Henry's Uncle, please visit www.henrysuncle.org.
https://podcast.evangelicalendtimemachine.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/RadioEndtimeNews-Requests-to-online-abortion-pill-mill-go-up.mp3
This week, Christian returns for part 2 of the Pretty Girl Pill Club origin story, an idea born of one drug fueled Cinco De Mayo. Sophie tells the full story of her infamous “party monster” phase, toxic friendships and alleged OC pill mills. FULL EPISODE NOTES AND LINKS: https://www.pgpcpod.com/episode-archive/episode6 DISCLAIMER: We are NOT professionals! We are just a couple of idiots on the internet with atypical brain chemistry. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/pgpc/support
Unc finally celebrates 1 year of clean time and completely completing the 12 month rehab program he bestowed upon so many moons ago. Its been a long journey and to celebrate we dig deep into the vaults to dust off a recording almost 3 years old done with missing co-host Ryan. The two share jail stories, the arresting tales that got them there, the weird things that happen on the inside and briefly overview the program politics that inmates must abide by in order to keep the peace. Trigger warning, Unc details the amount of poop he had to clean up as a trustee, Ryan talks about his almost 21'st birthday DUI arrest; getting his mugshot with tear smeared party face paint and more on this blast from the past episode of Nod Squad.
Continuing on with the trend, Our Reviews Will Kill You continues to go live from remote locations, with the quality only getting better each show! This week on OrkU, the news is filled with some more funny stuff to come out of quarantine including the Oakland Sideshow, Britney Spears, Larry David, Samuel L. Jackson, and some music from rekording on YouTube. A Tiger King update as OJ Simpson shares his verdict, Quibi, Lindsay Lohan, Scrubs podcast, delayed Marvel Movies, people horny for Mufasa and Lion King, and Rick and Morty. No, wait, not Rick and Morty, since that segment was pulled out because Adult Swim has a sick up their backsides and decided we weren't allowed to show a short clip to tell you about it. That is a lot, but there is more since the boys also talk reviews with Million Little Things, Westworld, The Pharmacist, and a Netflix suggestion to watch Tom Segura.
Rene Thomas Folse, JD, Ph.D. is the host for this edition which reports on the following news stories. Substantial Evidence Standard Applies to OSHA Appeals, C&R Resignation Resolves Wrongful Termination Claim, Arrests Made for $3.2M Sober Living Fraud, Convicted Long Beach Hospital Owner to Serve 15 Months, L.A. Sheriff Faces Fraud Charges After Fake Sniper Claim, 7th San Diego "Pill Mill" Doctor Pleads Guilty, Study Shows Early PT Reduces Opiate Use and Lost Time, TRISTAR Acquires Aspen Risk Management Group.
Pill Mill & Fired Chicago Police Superintendent Speaks Up.
Everyday we hear tragic stories in the news. Our goal is to present you with amazing success stories of people who have gone from Tragedy to Triumph Episode 16: Human of Addiction - Jake Bradshaw Jake Bradshaw shares his amazing story of Recovery! Growing up an only child and surrounded by free thinkers, Jake has always been encouraged to do something amazing. Living in the suburbs of Portsmouth Ohio, Jake experienced the Opioid Epidemic firsthand and has lost many people along the way. Even with his own addiction struggles, Jake was able to have a successful career as a Stock Broker until it all came crumbling down around him. From many run-ins with the police, a stint in federal prison, and personal degradation, Jake finally embraced a life worth living. Today Jake has a life that centers around helping others. Created and manages the successful Facebook account "Humans of Addiction" and always makes himself available to someone in need - Jake is the definition of "Doing BIG things"
https://www.patreon.com/user?u=4553739 you can donate through this site paypal email account MBrodel@aol.com Martin Brodel 36248 HWY 133 Hotchkiss, Colorado 81419 martinbrodel1776.com http://www.zerohedge.com/ http://www.breitbart.com/ https://www.aol.com/ http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/ http://dailycaller.com/ Bear's True Blue http://www.bearsheadgasketsealer.com/ ph# 1-615-332-4570 type in Brodel for promo code and get 10% off https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f4cczQOLIhs https://www.real.video/channel/martinbrodel
Give us about ten minutes a day and we will give you all the local news, local sports, local weather, and local events you can handle. Today...A Pill Mill owner from Glen Burnie sentenced to 20 years. Krish Vignarajah can continue her campaign. Maryland is a pretty safe state for kids to drive. St. Mary's High School wins MVA award for seat belt use. An odd poll from Gonzalez Research, and The Maryland Crabs have some candidate interviews coming up. And of course, your local (very nice) weather forecast from George at DMV Weather. Flash Briefing for Alexa. Yep, I finally brought the Daily News Brief to Alexa. Search for "Eye On Annapolis Daily News Brief" in your Alexa app and enable it--and be sure to drop us a rating! More info here. The Eye On Annapolis Daily News Brief is produced every Monday through Friday and available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Music, Stitcher Radio, tunein, IHeartRADIO, Amazon Echo, YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, and of course at Eye On Annapolis. Our weather partner is DMV Weather based in Annapolis. Please download their APP so you can keep on top of the local weather scene! Please be sure to check out our weekly sister podcast, The Maryland Crabs!
Ryan goes to a Pill Mill. Andrew morphs into the couch of Amber's dreams. Lexi gives birth sideways. Jade's apartment becomes a halfway house. Special Guest Comedian Jordan Rock
Greg interviews Lisa Roberts, a Health Department Nurse for the city of Portsmouth, Ohio. She’s been working as a Portsmouth nurse for the past 29 years. She also worked with Sam Quinones on his highly-acclaimed book Dreamland. This episode is Part Three in a series of podcasts that will explore life after Dreamland for those who helped Sam with his book.
In the early 2000s, the press–at least in Boston, where I was living at the time–was full of shrill stories about drug-crazed addicts breaking into area pharmacies in search of something called “Oxycontin.” I had no idea what Oxycontin was, but I was pretty sure there must be something remarkable about it if ordinary drug fiends were risking jail time and worse by robbing mom-and-pop drug stores to get it. As Sam Quinones explains in his remarkable book Dreamland: The True Tale of American’s Opiate Epidemic (Bloomsbury Press, 2015), the Oxycontin crime wave was an early moment in the emergence of a full-blown Opiate epidemic in the United States. For many young doctors working in “pain management in the 90s and naughts, Oxycontin was remarkable indeed. It gave them just what their predecessors in the eternal fight against pain lacked: a supposedly non-addictive opium-based medication that they could prescribe far and wide without fear of hooking their patients on it. And with all the best intentions, prescribe it far and wide these doctors did. But it wasn’t non-addictive at all; masses of patients become dependent. And not only them. Drug-users learned that “Oxy” afforded a wonderful high, and it became highly coveted “on the street.” The rub was that this new “wonder drug” was either hard to get–unless you had access to a “Pill Mill”–and/or very expensive. So Oxycontin addicts got desperate. Some, like the ones the press was screaming about in Boston, stole the drug from the local CVS and the like. Most, however, turned to an old drug that was easier to get and cheaper: Black Tar Heroin from Mexico. In the wake of Oxycontin, Black Tar spread from the Southwest across much of the U.S., even to places like Western Massachusetts, where I live now and the heroin epidemic is in full, tragic swing. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In the early 2000s, the press–at least in Boston, where I was living at the time–was full of shrill stories about drug-crazed addicts breaking into area pharmacies in search of something called “Oxycontin.” I had no idea what Oxycontin was, but I was pretty sure there must be something remarkable about it if ordinary drug fiends were risking jail time and worse by robbing mom-and-pop drug stores to get it. As Sam Quinones explains in his remarkable book Dreamland: The True Tale of American’s Opiate Epidemic (Bloomsbury Press, 2015), the Oxycontin crime wave was an early moment in the emergence of a full-blown Opiate epidemic in the United States. For many young doctors working in “pain management in the 90s and naughts, Oxycontin was remarkable indeed. It gave them just what their predecessors in the eternal fight against pain lacked: a supposedly non-addictive opium-based medication that they could prescribe far and wide without fear of hooking their patients on it. And with all the best intentions, prescribe it far and wide these doctors did. But it wasn’t non-addictive at all; masses of patients become dependent. And not only them. Drug-users learned that “Oxy” afforded a wonderful high, and it became highly coveted “on the street.” The rub was that this new “wonder drug” was either hard to get–unless you had access to a “Pill Mill”–and/or very expensive. So Oxycontin addicts got desperate. Some, like the ones the press was screaming about in Boston, stole the drug from the local CVS and the like. Most, however, turned to an old drug that was easier to get and cheaper: Black Tar Heroin from Mexico. In the wake of Oxycontin, Black Tar spread from the Southwest across much of the U.S., even to places like Western Massachusetts, where I live now and the heroin epidemic is in full, tragic swing. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In the early 2000s, the press–at least in Boston, where I was living at the time–was full of shrill stories about drug-crazed addicts breaking into area pharmacies in search of something called “Oxycontin.” I had no idea what Oxycontin was, but I was pretty sure there must be something remarkable about it if ordinary drug fiends were risking jail time and worse by robbing mom-and-pop drug stores to get it. As Sam Quinones explains in his remarkable book Dreamland: The True Tale of American’s Opiate Epidemic (Bloomsbury Press, 2015), the Oxycontin crime wave was an early moment in the emergence of a full-blown Opiate epidemic in the United States. For many young doctors working in “pain management in the 90s and naughts, Oxycontin was remarkable indeed. It gave them just what their predecessors in the eternal fight against pain lacked: a supposedly non-addictive opium-based medication that they could prescribe far and wide without fear of hooking their patients on it. And with all the best intentions, prescribe it far and wide these doctors did. But it wasn’t non-addictive at all; masses of patients become dependent. And not only them. Drug-users learned that “Oxy” afforded a wonderful high, and it became highly coveted “on the street.” The rub was that this new “wonder drug” was either hard to get–unless you had access to a “Pill Mill”–and/or very expensive. So Oxycontin addicts got desperate. Some, like the ones the press was screaming about in Boston, stole the drug from the local CVS and the like. Most, however, turned to an old drug that was easier to get and cheaper: Black Tar Heroin from Mexico. In the wake of Oxycontin, Black Tar spread from the Southwest across much of the U.S., even to places like Western Massachusetts, where I live now and the heroin epidemic is in full, tragic swing. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In the early 2000s, the press–at least in Boston, where I was living at the time–was full of shrill stories about drug-crazed addicts breaking into area pharmacies in search of something called “Oxycontin.” I had no idea what Oxycontin was, but I was pretty sure there must be something remarkable about it if ordinary drug fiends were risking jail time and worse by robbing mom-and-pop drug stores to get it. As Sam Quinones explains in his remarkable book Dreamland: The True Tale of American's Opiate Epidemic (Bloomsbury Press, 2015), the Oxycontin crime wave was an early moment in the emergence of a full-blown Opiate epidemic in the United States. For many young doctors working in “pain management in the 90s and naughts, Oxycontin was remarkable indeed. It gave them just what their predecessors in the eternal fight against pain lacked: a supposedly non-addictive opium-based medication that they could prescribe far and wide without fear of hooking their patients on it. And with all the best intentions, prescribe it far and wide these doctors did. But it wasn't non-addictive at all; masses of patients become dependent. And not only them. Drug-users learned that “Oxy” afforded a wonderful high, and it became highly coveted “on the street.” The rub was that this new “wonder drug” was either hard to get–unless you had access to a “Pill Mill”–and/or very expensive. So Oxycontin addicts got desperate. Some, like the ones the press was screaming about in Boston, stole the drug from the local CVS and the like. Most, however, turned to an old drug that was easier to get and cheaper: Black Tar Heroin from Mexico. In the wake of Oxycontin, Black Tar spread from the Southwest across much of the U.S., even to places like Western Massachusetts, where I live now and the heroin epidemic is in full, tragic swing. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/medicine
In the early 2000s, the press–at least in Boston, where I was living at the time–was full of shrill stories about drug-crazed addicts breaking into area pharmacies in search of something called “Oxycontin.” I had no idea what Oxycontin was, but I was pretty sure there must be something remarkable about it if ordinary drug fiends were risking jail time and worse by robbing mom-and-pop drug stores to get it. As Sam Quinones explains in his remarkable book Dreamland: The True Tale of American's Opiate Epidemic (Bloomsbury Press, 2015), the Oxycontin crime wave was an early moment in the emergence of a full-blown Opiate epidemic in the United States. For many young doctors working in “pain management in the 90s and naughts, Oxycontin was remarkable indeed. It gave them just what their predecessors in the eternal fight against pain lacked: a supposedly non-addictive opium-based medication that they could prescribe far and wide without fear of hooking their patients on it. And with all the best intentions, prescribe it far and wide these doctors did. But it wasn't non-addictive at all; masses of patients become dependent. And not only them. Drug-users learned that “Oxy” afforded a wonderful high, and it became highly coveted “on the street.” The rub was that this new “wonder drug” was either hard to get–unless you had access to a “Pill Mill”–and/or very expensive. So Oxycontin addicts got desperate. Some, like the ones the press was screaming about in Boston, stole the drug from the local CVS and the like. Most, however, turned to an old drug that was easier to get and cheaper: Black Tar Heroin from Mexico. In the wake of Oxycontin, Black Tar spread from the Southwest across much of the U.S., even to places like Western Massachusetts, where I live now and the heroin epidemic is in full, tragic swing. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In the early 2000s, the press–at least in Boston, where I was living at the time–was full of shrill stories about drug-crazed addicts breaking into area pharmacies in search of something called “Oxycontin.” I had no idea what Oxycontin was, but I was pretty sure there must be something remarkable about it if ordinary drug fiends were risking jail time and worse by robbing mom-and-pop drug stores to get it. As Sam Quinones explains in his remarkable book Dreamland: The True Tale of American's Opiate Epidemic (Bloomsbury Press, 2015), the Oxycontin crime wave was an early moment in the emergence of a full-blown Opiate epidemic in the United States. For many young doctors working in “pain management in the 90s and naughts, Oxycontin was remarkable indeed. It gave them just what their predecessors in the eternal fight against pain lacked: a supposedly non-addictive opium-based medication that they could prescribe far and wide without fear of hooking their patients on it. And with all the best intentions, prescribe it far and wide these doctors did. But it wasn't non-addictive at all; masses of patients become dependent. And not only them. Drug-users learned that “Oxy” afforded a wonderful high, and it became highly coveted “on the street.” The rub was that this new “wonder drug” was either hard to get–unless you had access to a “Pill Mill”–and/or very expensive. So Oxycontin addicts got desperate. Some, like the ones the press was screaming about in Boston, stole the drug from the local CVS and the like. Most, however, turned to an old drug that was easier to get and cheaper: Black Tar Heroin from Mexico. In the wake of Oxycontin, Black Tar spread from the Southwest across much of the U.S., even to places like Western Massachusetts, where I live now and the heroin epidemic is in full, tragic swing. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/drugs-addiction-and-recovery
In the early 2000s, the press–at least in Boston, where I was living at the time–was full of shrill stories about drug-crazed addicts breaking into area pharmacies in search of something called “Oxycontin.” I had no idea what Oxycontin was, but I was pretty sure there must be something remarkable about it if ordinary drug fiends were risking jail time and worse by robbing mom-and-pop drug stores to get it. As Sam Quinones explains in his remarkable book Dreamland: The True Tale of American’s Opiate Epidemic (Bloomsbury Press, 2015), the Oxycontin crime wave was an early moment in the emergence of a full-blown Opiate epidemic in the United States. For many young doctors working in “pain management in the 90s and naughts, Oxycontin was remarkable indeed. It gave them just what their predecessors in the eternal fight against pain lacked: a supposedly non-addictive opium-based medication that they could prescribe far and wide without fear of hooking their patients on it. And with all the best intentions, prescribe it far and wide these doctors did. But it wasn’t non-addictive at all; masses of patients become dependent. And not only them. Drug-users learned that “Oxy” afforded a wonderful high, and it became highly coveted “on the street.” The rub was that this new “wonder drug” was either hard to get–unless you had access to a “Pill Mill”–and/or very expensive. So Oxycontin addicts got desperate. Some, like the ones the press was screaming about in Boston, stole the drug from the local CVS and the like. Most, however, turned to an old drug that was easier to get and cheaper: Black Tar Heroin from Mexico. In the wake of Oxycontin, Black Tar spread from the Southwest across much of the U.S., even to places like Western Massachusetts, where I live now and the heroin epidemic is in full, tragic swing. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In the early 2000s, the press–at least in Boston, where I was living at the time–was full of shrill stories about drug-crazed addicts breaking into area pharmacies in search of something called “Oxycontin.” I had no idea what Oxycontin was, but I was pretty sure there must be something remarkable about it if ordinary drug fiends were risking jail time and worse by robbing mom-and-pop drug stores to get it. As Sam Quinones explains in his remarkable book Dreamland: The True Tale of American’s Opiate Epidemic (Bloomsbury Press, 2015), the Oxycontin crime wave was an early moment in the emergence of a full-blown Opiate epidemic in the United States. For many young doctors working in “pain management in the 90s and naughts, Oxycontin was remarkable indeed. It gave them just what their predecessors in the eternal fight against pain lacked: a supposedly non-addictive opium-based medication that they could prescribe far and wide without fear of hooking their patients on it. And with all the best intentions, prescribe it far and wide these doctors did. But it wasn’t non-addictive at all; masses of patients become dependent. And not only them. Drug-users learned that “Oxy” afforded a wonderful high, and it became highly coveted “on the street.” The rub was that this new “wonder drug” was either hard to get–unless you had access to a “Pill Mill”–and/or very expensive. So Oxycontin addicts got desperate. Some, like the ones the press was screaming about in Boston, stole the drug from the local CVS and the like. Most, however, turned to an old drug that was easier to get and cheaper: Black Tar Heroin from Mexico. In the wake of Oxycontin, Black Tar spread from the Southwest across much of the U.S., even to places like Western Massachusetts, where I live now and the heroin epidemic is in full, tragic swing. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Randal W. now 29 years old and 1 year clean and sober, takes us through her unbelievable 14 year history of addiction and excessive alcohol and drug abuse. Don't want to miss this episode, join us now!