heroin

Join Cameron English and Dr. Chuck Dinerstein on Episode 85 of the Science Dispatch podcast as they discuss:
The German edition of Medscape Medical News repo
Some of you screwballs out there have been complaining that I'm not giving enough chemistry lessons. No accounting for taste.
Several months ago, we were about to cover an important story out of San Francisco. However, the coronavirus pandemic hit, and we've been focused almost exclusively on it since then.
Heroin, not oxycodone or hydrocodone, is by far the most dangerous opiate on the street. But technically, it isn't dangerous at all. And it's not necessarily a "street" drug because It can be legal. Confused?
Reprinted with permission of the author and the Cato Institute. Dr.
Last month, we reported on an earth-shattering documentary not-so-subtly titled Seattle Is Dying.
Addiction is a complex phenomenon. Genetic, physiological, cultural, and socioeconomic factors all appear to play a role.
In a trend described as “shocking,” news outlets are
The “opioid epidemic” consistently addressed in the news, by politicians and throughout social media conflates many aspects of the issue, often speaking interchangeably about prescription medications and illicit drugs.