Heroin, Cocaine, Crack, Meth Addiction Treatment


 

Heroin, Cocaine, Crack, Meth Addiction Treatment – www.youtube.com www.encognitive.com Alexander G. Schauss, PhD, FACN, is the Senior Director of Natural and Medicinal Products Research, AIBMR Life Sciences, in Puyallup, Washington. A former Clinical Professor of Natural Products Research and Adjunct Research Professor of Botanical Medicine at the National College of Naturopathic Medicine in Portland, Oregon, he has held academic appointments at other institutions, including: Senior Director of the Southwest College Research Institute in Scottsdale, Arizona; Associate Professor of Research at the Southwest College of Naturopathic Medicine and Health Sciences, in Tempe, Arizona; Director of the Institute for Biosocial Research, City University, Seattle; and, Lecturer in Biostatistics and Epidemiology at Bastyr University in Seattle. Dr. Schauss has been a member of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Office of Alternative Medicine (OAM) Advisory Council (AMPAC); a member of the Ad Hoc Developmental Planning Committee of the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements (ODS), a reviewer of botanical standards and information monographs for the US Pharmacopoeia Convention (USP), and reviewer for the International Bibliographic Information on Dietary Supplements (IBIDS) database, maintained through an interagency partnership with the Food and Nutrition Information Center, National Agricultural Library, and US Department of Agriculture (USDA), which provides access to bibliographic citations and abstracts from published

 

Bath Salts Incidents Down Since DEA Banned Synthetic Drug

Filed under: drug abuse treatment association inc

"We do believe that prevention strategies led to reduced consumption," Dr. Wesley Clark, director of the government's Center for Substance Abuse Treatment told The Huffington Post. "It was never a high frequency event, it was a drug du jour," among …
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Can You Outsmart Addiction?

Filed under: drug abuse treatment association inc

In addition to being more likely to use drugs, people of high intelligence are typically less willing to admit a problem and seek professional help and harder to treat when they arrive in treatment. Here are a few reasons that intelligence can actually …
Read more on PsychCentral.com (blog)