Tag Archives: heroin

Heroin Addiction Claims Philip Seymour Hoffman – Dead at 46

I honestly don’t know how to solve our problem that we lose so many people, both famous and unknown, to addiction.  I grew up in drug central in California and almost everyone used drugs.  But even amongst the kids growing up in the drug plentiful late 1970s like me, we knew that if it involved a needle or a flame and spoon it was best to say no.  Even ‘druggies’ realized that meth, crack, and heroine were asking for an overdose.  The needles themselves spread disease, but the drugs were often of indeterminate strength and mixed with random ingredients to ‘cut them’ for more sales.  Mixed with partying, poor diet, lack of sleep, alcohol and cocaine, shooting up is a like playing Russian Roulette.

Philip Seymour Hoffman was one of my favorite actors and extremely talented.  He gets added to the list of my favorites like Mitch Hedburg, John Belushi, Chris Farley, Elvis, and Morrison that all died too soon due to drug addiction.  Were there family members or friends who could have forced an intervention?  Did their former rehab facilities not do proper follow-up?  What about all those we don’t hear about found every day, dead in their own vomit with a needle stuck in their arm?

Not sure what to do.  But we need to do something.

BREAKING: Philip Seymour Hoffman Found Dead at 46

By                             
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Philip Seymour Hoffman found dead at 46. (Getty Images)

Academy Award winner Philip Seymour Hoffman was found dead in his New York City apartment on Sunday. He was 46.

The New York City Police Department  confirmed to “The Insider With Yahoo” that the actor was found dead at 12 p.m. ET in his fourth floor apartment in the West Village of New York City.

While the official cause of death is still unknown at this point, police confirm that he may have died of a drug overdose. The actor was found with a needle in his arm and apparent heroin was found at the scene. Playwright David Katz is believed to have made the initial discovery.

The New York Medical Examiner confirms that an autopsy of the remains will be conducted on Monday.

Hoffman’s family released a statement regarding his death:

“We are devastated by the loss of our beloved Phil and appreciate the outpouring of love and support we have received from everyone. This is a tragic and sudden loss and we ask that you respect our privacy during this time of grieving.  Please keep Phil in your thoughts and prayers.” The family will not be making any further statements at this time.

[Related: Celebrities React to Philip Seymour Hoffman’s Death]

Hoffman struggled with a heroin addiction and had checked into rehab in May 2013.

In a 2006 interview with CBS’ “60 Minutes,” Hoffman discussed his earlier drug use dating back to the time after his graduation from New York University’s drama school.

“It was all that [drugs and alcohol], yeah, it was anything I could get my hands on… I liked it all,” Hoffman said. Eventually, he chose to seek treatment. “I went [to rehab], I got sober when I was 22 years old. You get panicked… and I got panicked for my life. It really was just that.”

He also revealed that his drug habit was life-threatening. “I have so much empathy for these young actors that are 19 and all of a sudden they’re beautiful and famous and rich. I’m like, ‘Oh my God. I’d be dead.’ You know what I mean? I’d be 19, beautiful, famous and rich. That would be it. I think back at that time. I think if I had the money, that kind of money and stuff. So, yeah [I would have died].”

Bizarrely, Hoffman was the victim of a death hoax earlier this week. However, at the time, his rep confirmed that he was alive and well.

Hoffman won an Academy Award for Best Actor for his work in the 2005 film, “Capote.” He’s has been nominated for Oscars for his performances in “The Master,” “Doubt,” and “Charlie Wilson’s War.” The longtime thespian will also be remembered for a number of smaller films, including “Magnolia,” “Synecdoche, New York, and “The Talented Mr. Ripley,” as well as his breakout in “Twister” and his most recent turn as Plutarch Heavensbee in “The Hunger Games: Catching Fire.”

Hoffman was also active in the New York theater scene, and had been nominated for Tony Awards three times.

He has three children, Tallulah Hoffman, Cooper Alexander Hoffman and Willa Hoffman, all under the age of 11, with costume designer Mimi O’Donnell. While Hoffman and O’Donnell never married, they’ve been together since 1999, when they met on the set of the play “In Arabia We’d All Be Kings.”

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Cocaine, Heroine, Cannabis and Other Old Over the Counter Remedies

 

Weed, Booze, Cocaine and Other Old School “Medicine” Ads

Posted by Katie

Granted, hindsight is 20/20, but some awfully strange substances have been used for pharmaceutical purposes in the past — and some might argue, continue to be used today. Here are some vintage advertisements touting items that we might balk at taking today.

Cocaine:

Lloyd Cocaine Toothache Drops
Lloyd Cocaine Toothache Drops
In the US, cocaine was sold over the counter until 1914 and was commonly found in products like toothache drops, dandruff remedies and medicinal tonics.

Metcalf's Coca Wine
Metcalf’s Coca Wine
Coca wine combined wine with cocaine, producing a compound now known as cocaethylene, which, when ingested, is nearly as powerful a stimulant as cocaine.

Vin Mariani Wine
Vin Mariani Wine
The marketing efforts for coca wine focused primarily on its medicinal properties, in part because it didn’t taste very good and in part because the cocaethylene effects were perceived to “fortify and refresh body and brain” and “restore health and vitality.”

Heroin:

Bayer Heroin
Bayer Heroin
From 1898 through to 1910, heroin was marketed as a cough suppressant by trusted companies like Bayer — alongside the company’s other new product, Aspirin.

Smith Glyco-Heroin
Smith Glyco-Heroin
A mixture of heroin and glycerin. “No other preparation has had its therapeutic value more thoroughly defined or better established.”

Opium:

Pantopon Roche Injectable Opium
Pantopon Roche Injectable Opium
“Try Pantopon in place of morphine for dependable, optimum relief of pain.”

Morphine:

Ayer's Cherry Pectoral
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral
Depending on which list of contents you reference, this cure for colds, coughs and “all diseases of the throat and lungs” contained either morphine or heroin.

Mrs. Winslow's Soothing SyrupMrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup
Contained 65 mg of morphine per fluid ounce. “For children teething.”

Quaaludes:

Quaalude-300
Quaalude-300
Brand name for the now-illegal sedative methaqualone. “Now the physician has one less tired, sleepy and apprehensive patient to contend with.”

Cigarettes:

Dr. Batty's Asthma Cigarettes
Dr. Batty’s Asthma Cigarettes
Cigarettes with unknown contents claimed to provide temporary relief of everything from asthma to colds, canker sores and bad breath. “Not recommended for children under 6.”

Alcohol:

Anheuser-Bush's Malt-Nutrine
Anheuser-Bush’s Malt-Nutrine
Starting in the late 1800s, many breweries produced “food tonics,” malt beverages containing around 2% alcohol that were promoted as “food in liquid form,” aiding in digestion, increasing appetite and aiding in sleep. “A boon to nursing mothers.”

Pabst Extract
Pabst Extract
A malt tonic from Pabst. “The best tonic prepares the way for happy, healthy motherhood.”

Chloroform:

Kimball White Pine and Tar Cough Syrup
Kimball White Pine and Tar Cough Syrup
Until 1976, chloroform was used in consumer products like cough syrup, toothpastes, ointments and other pharmaceuticals.

Marijuana:

Cosadein
Cosadein
This cough remedy contained, among other things, codeine, chloroform and cannabis.

Soda:

Coca-Cola
Coca-Cola
Coca-Cola was invented in the late 1800s as a “coca wine” (see above) mix of wine and cocaine, but the alcohol and cocaine were later replaced with syrup and coca leaves, respectively. Nevertheless, typical coca wine claims of increased vitality remained for many years.

Coca-Cola
“A valuable brain tonic, and a cure for all nervous affections — sick head-ache, neuralgia, hysteria, melancholy.”

Amphetamines:

Biphetamine
Biphetamine
A combination of two amphetamines; known popularly as “black beauties.” Marketed for its weight loss benefits.


Norodin
Brand name for methamphetamine. “The selective cerebral action of Norodin is useful in dispelling the shadows of mild mental depression.”

Dexedrine
Dexedrine
Brand name for dextroamphetamine. “Many of your patients — particularly housewives — are crushed under a load of dull, routine duties that leave them in a state of mental and emotional fatigue…Dexedrine will give them a feeling of energy and well-being, renewing their interest in life and living.”

Barbiturates:

McNeil Butisol Sodium
McNeil Butisol Sodium 
Brand name for butabarbital. “Mabel is unstable…it’s ‘that time’ in her life. To see her through the menopause, there’s gentle ‘daytime sedation’ in Butisol Sodium.”

Nembutal Suppositories
Nembutal Suppositories
Brand name for pentobarbital. “When little patients balk at scary, disquieting examinations…When they need prompt sedation (and the oral route isn’t feasible)…try Nembutal sodium suppositories…There is little tendency toward morning-after hangover.”

Lakeside Pentobarbital and Phenobarbital
Lakeside Pentobarbital and Phenobarbital
“When crisis demands quick-acting hypnotics.”

Unknown-Content Quackery:

Dr. Miles' Nervine
Dr. Miles’ Nervine
“Since I have been taking Nervine, nothing bothers me.”

Wolcott's Instant Pain AnnihilatorWolcott's Instant Pain Annihilator
Wolcott’s Instant Pain Annihilator
“A speedy & permanent cure for headache, toothache, neuralgia, catarrh and weak nerves.”

Dalley's Magical Pain Extractor
Dalley’s Magical Pain Extractor
“Molly Pitcher, the heroine of Monmouth, avenging her husband’s death.”

Dr. Ham's Aromatic Invigorator
Dr. Ham’s Aromatic Invigorator
A “cure for Dyspepsia, Low Spirits, Nervousness, Heartburn, Colic Pains, Wind in the Stomach or Pains in the Bowels, Headache, Drowsiness, Kidney and Liver Complaints, Melancholy, Delirium Tremens, and Intemperance.”

reposted from http://www.pharmacytechs.net/blog/old-school-medicine-ads

 

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