![]() Addicts will become addicted, non-addicts will not. You are confusing chemical dependence and addiction.Īddicts have brains that work differently to non-addicts. I was prescribed that much right after my hand surgery and I could barely tolerate the nausea and sluggishness when pretty strong pain was the alternative. I'd also question the people who aren't already tolerant of opiates to suddenly start cranking down 20-30 mg per day. ![]() There's not enough opiates to get addicted 5 mg per day, and not enough duration if you're cranking through them 20-30 mg per day. I still don't comprehend all the people who claim to have gotten addicted from a single 20-30 pill prescription for low dose opiates. S-3 does not search directly on Snapchat, but instead looks for dealers elsewhere - on other social media sites or the dark web - who reference a Snapchat account in their advertisements. For the last six months, it has also been using intelligence from public health data company S-3, which scours the internet for drug sellers, to identify Snapchat accounts that are potentially violating the rules. Snap said improvements to its proactive detection tools - which use artificial intelligence to identify pictures, words and emojis related to drug sales - have allowed the company to increase the number of accounts removed by 112% during the first half of 2021. 27, DEA Administrator Anne Milgram said social media companies were not doing enough to stop the sale of counterfeit pills on their platforms. The announcement comes less than one week after NBC News profiled eight parents whose children had died after taking a single fentanyl-laced pill purchased on Snapchat. "We are determined to remove illegal drug sales from our platform." "We have heard devastating stories from families impacted by this crisis, including cases where fentanyl-laced counterfeit pills were purchased from drug dealers on Snapchat," said Snapchat's parent company, Snap, in a blog post. So now Snapchat "said it has improved the automated systems it uses to detect the sale of illegal drugs on the app, hired more people to respond to law enforcement requests for data during criminal investigations and developed an in-app education portal called Heads Up focused on the dangers of fentanyl and counterfeit pills." Deadly counterfeit versions of prescription medications are "widely available on social media platforms," reports NBC News, and "2 in 5 of those seized and tested in the United States contain enough fentanyl to kill, according to a warning issued by the Drug Enforcement Administration last month." ![]()
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