BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--In
response to an Associated Press report issued yesterday stating a "90 percent increase of prescription
drug use in the United States," the Waismann Method, a leading treatment
facility specializing in opiate dependency, today provided additional
insight into the rise of pain pill usage. According to Clare Waismann,
who serves as executive director of the Waismann Method of Opiate
Detoxification and has witnessed this alarming epidemic first hand, "Both patients and
doctors need to take more responsibility for the problems associated
with prescription
painkiller abuse because they are at the root of the
cause." The official statement continues:
"Because pain medications are more and more available, it is no surprise
that prescription painkiller abuse has also become more prevalent.
With patients desperate to fill their prescriptions at any cost and
doctors also willing to prescribe high doses of pain medication, there
needs to be more internal policing by both parties. Not only should
doctors take more accountability for what they prescribe to their patients,
but the patients themselves need to become more responsible in following
recommended dosages despite their need for instant gratification. The
public needs to understand that medical use of prescription medications
can result in a serious dependency," said Waismann. "Additionally,
many individuals who receive prescriptions for pain are under the false
assumption that because they came from their doctors they are safe.
We need to begin educating patients of the potential hazards of taking
prescription medications and holding medical professions more accountable
for over-prescribing."
Waismann adds that a startling 85.5 percent of all patients assessed
in the center's 2006 Opiate
Dependency Survey were treated for prescription
dependency to opiates, such as morphine, hydrocodone, codeine and oxycodone,
with oxycodone identified as the chemical most often prescribed/used.
The Waismann Method hopes to inform people struggling with these dependencies
that there are a number of advanced treatment options available outside
of traditional rehabilitation. Waismann Method is a safe and humane
alternative that utilizes advanced medical practices to treat opiate
dependency. The rapid detoxification procedure reverses opiate
dependency while the patient is under anesthesia, therefore they do not experience
any pain or withdrawal. Patients receive 24-hour care in monitored
setting of a hospital intensive care unit.
"Our typical patient takes approximately four pills a day amounting
to 300 mgs of OxyContin, without realizing that this amount is the
dangerous equivalent of 75 pills of Vicodin. Doctors need to take more
time to educate their patients on dosage, and patients should ultimately
ask more questions of their doctors," said Waismann.
To coordinate an interview with Clare Waismann, please contact Katie
Williams at 619-234-0345 or via email at Williams@formulapr.com.
For more information please visit www.opiates.com.
About the Waismann Method
Drs. Clifford A. Bernstein and
Michael Lowenstein use the exclusive Waismann Method of Neuro-Regulation
to treat opiate dependency. Performed in a hospital intensive care
unit, the Waismann Method involves cleansing the opiate receptors in
the patient's brain of the narcotics while the patient is under anesthesia.
During the procedure, the patient will experience no conscious withdrawal,
and will be able to return home within days. 75 percent of the prescription
drug dependent patients who are treated with the Waismann Method remain
drug free after one year.