Is Decriminalizing Drug Use and Increasing Rehab Opportuniites the Solution to Illegal Drugs?
Question by Alvaro G: is decriminalizing drug use and increasing rehab opportuniites the solution to illegal drugs?
Mexico passed a controversial law on Aug. 20, 2009, decriminalizing people’s personal use of drugs.
the decriminalization policy is a progressive effort to humanize people who use drugs
punitive sanctions for drug users, such as detention, is no longer adopted in Mexico. The government believes that people who use drugs need health treatment. Drug addiction rehabilitation facilities should be established to fulfill their needs for health treatment, care and support for a full reco
Best answer:
Answer by obamasbro
whoooppie ! mexico is already a basket case,now it will be a total sh+i+t hole…people,drug users/addicts are worthless group that contribute nothing to society.what the fk is wrong with you,dopers do not work,just party….
Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!
Veterans courts focus on treatment, not jail time
Filed under: drug addiction treatment facilities
She is still in treatment at the Albany VA Medical Center, where she regularly sees counselors specializing in substance abuse and mental health. While there, she also encounters other veterans who come seeking treatment of various kinds, many of them …
Read more on Elmira Star-Gazette
The Cabin Chiang Mai Alcohol and Drug Rehab to Participate in APSAD …
Filed under: drug addiction treatment facilities
Psychologist Cameron Brown of The Cabin Chiang Mai rehab centre will join leading international and Australian addiction professionals at the Australasian Professional Society on Alcohol and other Drugs (APSAD) Conference – Australia's largest …
Read more on PR Web (press release)
No One Brings Dinner When Your Daughter Is an Addict
Filed under: drug addiction treatment facilities
… to a psychiatric hospital, diagnosed, released. She began years of counseling, recovery meetings, and intensive outpatient rehabilitation. She lived in a recovery house, relapsed, then spent seven weeks in a drug and alcohol addiction treatment center.
Read more on Slate Magazine