The manager of Sankalpa Dr. Tom O Brien talks openly about the making of ‘The Pharm’ and the value of film making as a model of adult learning and personal development. Currently Sankalpa is making two new films, one looking at elderly abuse and another exploring long term methadone maintenance.
Sankalpa is a holistic centre that works with people who are seeking support to detox off methadone.
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Meeting Room – a film about Concerned Parents Against Drugs
March 30th, 2013
New Stabilization Service in Sankalpa
March 16th, 2013
Is there a way out of this clinic?
March 1st, 2013
Useful Apps for within Addiction and Mental Health.
February 2nd, 2013
Sankalpa embraces the Community Reinforcement Approach
November 4th, 2012
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Posts Tagged ‘Sankalpa Films’
Interview with Tom on the making of ‘The Pharm’
Wednesday, November 24th, 2010Mandy talks about making ‘The Pharm’
Monday, November 15th, 2010‘The Pharm’ is a short film made by local people from Finglas and Cabra who attend the Sankalpa addiction rehabilitation program. The film is about addiction to valium and alcohol and focuses on the plight on a mother who is struggling with life in Finglas. The central character Deborah (Amanda Doonan) is not only struggling with the stresses and strains of her own life, she also has a teenage daughter Laura (Lynne Murray) who has started to mirror her mother’s behaviour. Deborah turns to her Doctor (Ray Higgins) for support who in turn prescribes her valium without an adequate assessment of her needs and in the end the prescription reinforces her isolation and sense of despair. Laura eventually convinces her mother to go to FAST (Finglas Addiction Support Team) but Debora is reluctant to admit she needs support.
Coming soon; ‘The Pharm’ a film by Sankalpa
Monday, June 28th, 2010‘The Pharm’ is a short film that explores the problem of Valium addiction in Finglas, Dublin. The Pharm is currently in post production! Keep an eye on www.sankalpa.ie for details of up coming viewings. If you are worried about your dependency on Valium please consult your GP.
The History of Valium Use
Introduced in 1963, Valium became one of the most widely prescribed tranquilizers over the next 10 years.
Valium had certain benefits over other competitor’s tranquilizers. While all of them worked on the limbic system, the part of the brain that regulates emotions, Valium was less bitter in taste, could be formulated in smaller doses, and provided relief without the expected side effect of drowsiness. Part of Valium’s appeal lay in the belief that it was non-addictive and, unlike other tranquilizers, was almost impossible to be taken in a lethal dose by a suicidal person.
By 1974, Valium represented 81 percent of the tranquilizer market in the United States. However, at this same time, the media presented what they considered rampant abuse of Valium, stating that only about 10 percent of prescriptions for Valium written in 1974 came from mental health professionals and 60 percent to 70 percent of Valium prescriptions came from the family doctor, gynecologists and pediatricians. The media also noted that a disproportionate number of prescriptions were given to women over 30 to control so-called “free-floating” anxiety.
In 1975 when tranquilizer usage in the United States reached its highest level, Valium also began to appear as an illegal “street” drug and became integrated in the American culture through movies and plays. Celebrity usage became apparent when an autopsy report found Valium in Elvis Presley’s system when he died in 1977.
In 1979, awareness was raised again through coverage of the Senate subcommittee hearings during which several well-regarded physicians testified on the dangers of Valium. The Food and Drug Administration forced Hoffman-LaRoche, the manufacturer of Valium, to include the caveat in its medical-journal advertisements for Valium as well as in the information provided to physicians stating that “anxiety or tension associated with the stress of everyday life usually does not require treatment with an anxiolytic drug.” This warning went into effect in the summer of 1980.
A 1981 report stated a possible link between Valium use and the rapid growth of cancer cells which had a greater impact on the drug’s popularity with the general public than the subcommittee meetings. However, a research study completed in 2005 showed that over 60 million prescriptions for Valium were written by American doctors and that 1.8 million Americans abused tranquilizers.
For more informaiton see: http://www.valiumaddictionhelp.com
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