Vicodine Addiction

Vicodine Addiction

In any case of suffering pain from playing golf or tennis, injury in a car accident, lifting heavy box, working at the gym or recovering from a surgery or any particular disease like cancer or arthritis, a physician is likely to prescribe a pain killer to help you manage the discomfort. Yet weeks or months later – long after the initial injury may have healed – you are still taking vicodin, oxycontin or other pain killers, you may have vicodine dependency. Vicodin is prescribed for moderate pain to severe pain. In fact, with pain and discomfort becoming more frequent, you are taking an alarmingly higher dosage than you were in the beginning. Since vicodine dependency is highly common, care must be taken to follow the doctor’s instructions when taking vicodine so as to prevent a vicodine abuse. Also you should not take a larger dose, or take it more frequently, or take it for longer than the doctor has prescribed.

But the very drug that was supposed to help you is now starting to kill you. The pain of injury or the fear of medical treatment has been compounded by the painful discomfort of withdrawal. Rather than easing your pain, you are experiencing intensified pain levels. Patients suffering at pain levels of two or three often jump to levels of eight or nine after one year of painkiller usage. This scenario is increasingly common due to stress and need of immediate effect or relief.

Today approximately 75% of the patients suffer vicodine dependency, whereas in years past dependencies to heroin was the most common drug abuse. It is recognized that all patients who are physically dependent on prescription pain killers as well as other opiates such as heroin became dependent through no fault of their own. Their disease is a chemical imbalance that requires expert medical treatment in a safe, humane and effective environment.

People suffering from a dependency to opiates are not the stereotypical drug addicts that we pass by on the streets. This disease afflicts people from all walks of life, regardless of social or economic status – from athletes to stockbrokers, entertainers to homemakers, students to skilled laborers.

By planning our life systematically and knowing to control stress management, we can avoid getting dependent on vicodine.

Also read our article about Valium Addiction

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