Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Driving Under the Influence of Legal Drugs

Many driving schools teach the dangers of drinking and driving with some also mentioning the effects and dangers of driving while under the influence of marijuana. But how many drivers realize that driving under legally prescribed drugs and some herbal medications can be just as dangerous?


Diving is a skill, actually it is a very complex skill determined by changes in our physical, emotional and mental conditions all of which can be impaired by the use of drugs.


Over-the-counter medications such as Antihistamines cause the brain to slow down and could impair reaction time, coordination and cause drowsiness. Decongestants can also cause drowsiness, anxiety and dizziness. The National Highway and Traffic Safety Administrations estimates 100,000 traffic crashes and approximately 1,500 deaths are caused annually by people becoming drowsy while driving with many of these people using over-the -counter medications.


Some drivers say they feel more alert and confident when driving under certain medications.

The reality is drugs can fool you into believing you are in control of your driving when in fact, you are driving impaired.

This is also true with prescribed medications such as Xanax, Valium, Klonopin, OxyContin and Roxicodone. Although these drugs have their benefits when prescribed by a doctor and taken as prescribed, patients prescribed these medications should always read the label and information that usually comes with these medications. All of these medications recommend that a person does not operate a motor vehicle or machinery when taking the drug.


Today, some of the drugs dangerous to driving a motor vehicle are called Herbal Medications, or Supplements. These herbal or naturopathic remedies are not registered with the Food and Drug Administration and will often, in fine print, disclose the FDA does not certify the product. These products are produced to inform you of the desired affects, not the actual effects the medication could have on the human body.


Currently with the expansion of the Internet, people can order herbal medications that are legal in the majority of states however, closely related to illegal drugs. Herbal medications such as K2, Salvia, and Kava-Kava cause hallucinations something a driver does not want to experience when behind the wheel. Other legal supplements sold under a variety of names mimic the effects of dangerous drugs such as Ecstasy and Cocaine. The use of any of these drugs will impair the skills necessary to drive a vehicle.


It is important to avoid harming yourself and others when driving, talk with your physician and pharmacist and learn all you can about the medication you are taking especially the side effects, what drugs are considered safe to combine and how any drugs affect your driving skills.


Never doctor yourself by taking over-the-counter medications or herbal drugs. It is always best to seek professional help from your physician. Remember, a safe driver is a smart driver and a smart driver knows better than to drive under the influence of any drug.


The National Safety Commission works to increase awareness of important safety issues, particularly those that deal with highway and traffic safety information. Our mission is to make consumers more vigilant and understand that "safety is no accident," through education and outreach programs. We promote driver education and training through our Driver Safety Blogs.

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Brief Overview of Legal Nursing Career



These days, nursing is no longer limited to working in hospitals and long-term care facilities. There are now a number opportunities available for those who are looking to go into the nursing field. One that is becoming increasingly popular is legal nurse consulting.


A legal nurse consultant provides an expert medical opinion in legal proceedings. They assist legal professionals on health care issues and provide insight into medical procedures and terminology.


Most civil and criminal court cases involve some type of medical concern, including malpractice suits, personal injury claims, and worker's compensation disputes. A legal nurse consultant helps attorneys and judges understand complicated medical information as it pertains to such legal matters. Consultants rely on their extensive practical nursing experience to investigate and interpret medical records from a legal perspective.


If you are interested in applying your medical expertise in the practice of the law, then legal nursing is the right career choice for you. You will be working with attorneys, insurance companies, and risk management divisions of hospitals, or you may even operate your own independent consulting practices.


Your duties in the field of legal nursing may include analyzing medical records, preparing medical reports and providing testimony as an expert witness. Legal cases involving medical malpractice, worker's compensation, health insurance fraud, patient abuse might benefit from your analysis and testimony.


Since most lawyers and judges do not have extensive medical backgrounds, they rely on you to help them understand technical details and educate them on medical matters. Similarly, a physician might need help from a legal nurse consultant to understand court charges and proceedings. You will also be called upon to help attorneys prepare official statements and determine the most appropriate lines of questioning to use on witnesses and defendants.


A legal nurse consultant is a licensed registered nurse. In the US, this means that you have been granted a certificate by your state allowing you to practice nursing. In order to become a legal nurse consultant, you have to have at least three years of experience in working in a medical center. That includes doctor's offices, clinics, hospitals, nursing homes, and rehabilitation centers.


To become a legal nurse consultant, it is important that you are able to speak well and express your thoughts and opinions clearly. You may be called on the witness stand to give expert testimony on healthcare issues. A clear presentation of the facts of a case can make you a more credible expert witness.


 

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Marijuana, Motivation, Legalization

There is a lot of discussion these days about the legalization of substances, especially marijuana. These discussions and articles focus on how it might improve the economy, to decriminalization resulting in fewer deaths and a drop in the growth of HIV cases, to medical benefits of marijuana. You might expect someone who witnesses the difficulties and occasional devastation that substances cause to be firmly against legalization. This is not necessarily the case. After all, consider alcohol and tobacco are legal, and yet they are listed as the most destructive substances to individuals and society currently. Then again, this might be a reason not to legalize other substances. In this article the focus is not to focus exclusively on legalization, but on the motive for substance use, and how that is more important than its legal status.


In a class I teach at FIU on the Psychology of Drugs and Drug Abuse I am often asked if I think marijuana should be legalized.

I usually try not to express my opinion directly, but instead present and entertain discussion on the topic. But recently I was pushed for an answer, and I replied: "I once read an outstanding book called 'Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Television.' What I remember most from that book is how often we base our decisions on too little information (in the case of the book's perspective, based on television images. Take elections for example). So my best answer is I probably do not have enough information to make an educated decision." However, based on Amsterdam and Portugal's experience of fewer problems as a result of decriminalization, it seems like it is at least a viable option. Of course, if the U.S took that approach, there is first no guarantee it would go the same way, and secondly I would anticipate an explosive increase in substance use initially. The difficulty is: are the rewards worth it?

One thing that concerns me about the American people's substance use is the motivation. According to VH1's documentary on "The Drug Years" the initial increase in marijuana and hallucinogen use in the sixties was a result of attempting to achieve enlightenment and a sense of oneness and communion. This is evident in the images we have of that time: sit-ins, free drugs being provided at musical events, and wanting others to "turn-on" and experience the sense of love and oneness that others were achieving and that a psychology lecturer at Harvard named Timothy Leary was advocating.


Initially, that seems to have been the purpose. But times have changed since the sixties, and let's face it; even then the movement was not completely successful. We American's are an individualistic culture. On the continuum between individualism and collectivism Americans definitely fall on the side of individualism, which is defined as everyone looking out for themselves or their family first. This is opposed to collectivism, where the group is cohesive, and where the group protects one another and the individual looks out for the group above their personal needs. Using these definitions, it is quite easy to state Americans are on the individualism side of the spectrum. The movement in the sixties (which in some regards continues, witness "one human race" and "coexist" stickers) to make the human race more united, and now more in tune with the earth and its needs, is not grand enough to alter the individualistic nature of this culture yet. And it is the opinion of this writer that the individualistic attitude of this culture has even altered the motivation of drugs initially used to enhance a sense of oneness and enlightenment.


My more recent experience with clients is that these substances, especially marijuana, are used as an escape from reality. Many people find their existence boring, or worse, painful. A student (who I promised I would give credit for the quote) named Christine Vera said "In a world that feels nothing, we all want to feel something," when asked why she believes people use drugs. This statement seems related to the boredom with life discussed above. Many have become desensitized to life, and want more excitement. Without excitement, life is boring, and when life is boring, for many escape through substances becomes a viable option.


Although escape seems a motive much of the time (as reported by substance abusers entering treatment, by those who know addicts, or by those who also formulate personal theories to explain others' substance use) it is not always from boredom. Sometimes the individual perceives life as too painful to cope with without the use of substances for relief. Substances, at least initially, provide a sense of euphoria. This is true of nearly all substances, although some seem more effective to different individuals. (For example, some enjoy marijuana but not other substances, others cocaine, others alcohol, and so forth). Some of those attempting to escape pain have endured horrible life circumstances or, some horrible internal states (self-loathing, depression, or overwhelming anxiety, to name a few). Others began substance use innocently enough, but progressed into relying on it slowly, and now, as a result of the substance use, are caught in an endless cycle of substance use, further problems, further need to escape, continued substance use.


Besides the escape motive there is the desire to experience something new and different. This is often true of hallucinogen use. It is rare that someone would use hallucinogens to escape reality on a regular basis. Hallucinogens generally render a person unable to function in a normal manner for a period of time. When someone takes mushrooms, LSD, or other hallucinogens, they aren't generally trying to work, drive, or otherwise do much other than experience the "trip." In other cultures hallucinogens are used to facilitate enlightenment.


As mentioned earlier, hallucinogens have been used by other cultures as a pathway to enlightenment. In many of these cultures, those familiar with the uses of hallucinogens were shamans, medicine men, or the spiritual leader. This movement was also true in the sixties, where a certain sect of the population attempted to again connect with God or the spiritual, often using hallucinogens.


This is not generally true of hallucinogen use today. Today many young people are looking for a new experience. The abuse of cold medications (some of which in large doses create hallucinogen effects) is evidence of this. This is also true of the drug Salvia, only recently (July 2008) made illegal in this state (Florida). In other cultures, it is called "Diviner's Sage." But rather than using it to connect with a spiritual sense, it is simply used for the experience.


Many substances initially create a sense of connectedness between individuals. Alcohol has been known as a social lubricant, making talking and interacting with others easier. And marijuana is usually initiated with others in the beginning. But many resort to isolated use later. And even if this is not true, many simply get "high" with others playing video games or watching movies. The point is, it is generally not taken for spiritual reasons anymore, but instead to make perceived tedious tasks more bearable or to heighten the enjoyment of relatively passive tasks (listening to music, video games, movies).


In some states marijuana is used for medicinal purposes, and I believe the facts in this area speak for themselves. Marijuana helps those wasting from AIDS, those with cancer, and many other ailments that traditional treatment falls short in. This includes pain relief for some. In fact, prescription pain analgesics (opioid based pain killers) are quickly becoming more damaging to their users (which in many cases are abusers) than all illegal substances combined. There were more deaths in Florida in recent years from overdose on prescription medications than all illegal drugs combined. And there has yet to be a reported case of marijuana overdose.


There is a drawback to these prescription uses however. Many of my students who know people in California (where there seems to be the most "medicinal" use of marijuana) state that many of their peers have prescriptions. One student reported that 8 out of 10 of their friends in California have a prescription. Headaches and anxiety as well as insomnia are reported to be reasons to get a prescription.


In summary, there are many reasons to decriminalize some, if not all, drug use. The benefits seem important in this day and age. But at the same time we are culture where people are often out for themselves. And we have become a country and culture of shortcuts and reliance on pills to make our lives tolerable, rather than the more natural and healthy (but requiring more time and energy) solutions. Feel depressed, get a prescription. Want to loose weight, get a prescription or order diet pills from the internet. Additionally, some of the communal and enlightenment reasons seem outdated and unlikely at this time. Then there is the likelihood there will be a strong surge in substance use if decriminalized. There is probably a great deal more information out there that both supports and denounces legalization or decriminalization.


In an ideal society, we would work toward self actualization while assisting our peers to do the same. There would be a sense of communion with all other humans, and with all living creatures. My question is which helps us get there, continued criminalization of substances, or the legalization of them.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Divorce Attorney Milwaukee Wi - Parting Ways Legally

Divorces or dissolution of marriages is the legal termination of a marital affair that frees a married couple from the duties and responsibilities of a matrimonial bond. It does not only involve the separation of the marital partners, it also involves the issues like spousal support, property distribution, child custody and support.

According to the Milwaukee, WI law system, a divorce may be granted on the grounds of an ablated marriage breakdown. This can be done by filing a joint petition having the necessary details, or, by living separately for at least 12 months, without any possibility of patching up.

Once both the spouses agree on filing a divorce, the next step would be to get hold of a divorce attorney. Milwaukee, WI has an organized law system that validates a separation only on the presentation of valid documents. To approach a divorce lawyer, an individual needs to provide the following documentation to carry out the dissolution without any hindrances.

1. Full name

2. Current address

3. Phone number

4. Birth date certifications

5. Information of any prior marriage

6. Copy of domestic contracts

7. Details of any marriage counseling sessions

8. Full names, birth dates and educational details of children, if any.

9. Income details.

10. List of all the current assets and liabilities.

Milwaukee, WI follows a 'no-fault' divorce system which does not require any proof or reason behind a divorce. But the court might consider the issues like the parties' behavior during the separation procedure. Most of the times, both the parties are asked to choose between two options - the Traditional divorce system and the Collaborative divorce system.

Divorces can be a rather complex process, especially for those who have complicated situations. That is when one needs a proper divorce attorney who knows the right approach. In Wisconsin, the procedures involved in a divorce case cannot be completed in less than 120 days, if not more. In the cases when either party agrees on a peaceful settlement, all the issues like child custody, property division, etc. are resolved without any hassles. But when the settlements are not cordial, the whole process may get take some time.

Both the cases require an experienced divorce attorney. Milwaukee, WI has a diverse law system that can be quite difficult to handle without an attorney.