‘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.
Sankalpa is a holistic centre that works with people who are seeking support to detox off methadone.
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Posts Tagged ‘valium’
Mandy talks about making ‘The Pharm’
Monday, November 15th, 2010Damien talks about his detox
Tuesday, November 9th, 2010Damien talks to Anne Marie about his detox from methadone, valium and anti-depressants. He is very positive about his experience in Sankalpa. He recognizes that there is not enough support in the clinics for people who do want to detox and that there should be more funding for centres like Sankalpa to support people to detox at their own pace over time, with the support of a team of people delivering a range of services including key working, psychotherapy, employment support, educational and creative programs.
Help Sankapa win the ‘Better together’ film competition!
Saturday, October 30th, 2010Win one of three €3,000 cash prizes for your charity, club or association!
Help Sankalpa win Just click here and vote for The Pharm! and then tell your friends!
Reckitt Benckiser fined £10.2m
Wednesday, October 20th, 2010A major pharmaceutical company has been fined £10.2m by the Office of Fair Trading in the UK. Reckitt Benckiser make Gaviscon, among other drugs. They withdrew the cheapest version of Gaviscon from the NHS register of drugs, so that doctors who entered ‘gaviscon’ into the data-base automatically came up with a more expensive version of the drug.
Drug companies use methods like this to ensure that they keep making money on their products. They also use more ‘above board’ methods. When a scientist comes up with a new medicine or drug, they can patent it, meaning no one else can produce it without their permission. This allows them to profit from their own research – fair enough, you might say. The patents are limited in length, so after a certain amount of time, anyone can use that research, make the same drug, and sell it for a profit. This is why you can buy unbranded paracetamol, aspirin and ibuprofen much more cheaply than other drugs. Good for competition, which means good for customers. Bad for pharmaceutical companies…..
Drug companies are not charities. They do not have your best interests at heart. They are businesses. They have shareholders. They sell products. Their purpose is not curing illness, but making a profit. There are many, many useful and helpful, even essential drugs out there, but it’s much more profitable to have more and more people use more and more medicines.
What causes addiction? Is it like cancer? Pneumonia? TB? Can you catch it? Is there a blood test or a scan that shows it up? Emotional, psychological, and social factors are responsible for addiction (see ‘rat park’ for more info) – so why are we treating it medically? Why are people prescribed Valium or Xanax when they are anxious? Why don’t we look at what’s making them anxious? Why are people prescribed methadone to stop them using heroin? Why don’t we look at what they’re getting out of heroin use and address that?
Pharmaceutical companies can afford big fines. They’re not going to stop making new medicines, and sometimes new diseases and disorders to go with them. It’s up to us to decide whether another drug is what we need, or whether we can manage our discomfort in other ways. What do you think? What other methods do pharmaceutical companies use to keep doctors prescribing and people using their products?
Check out these websites to find out more:
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/breaking/2010/1015/breaking13.html
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/01/080105140107.htm
http://www.sciencedaily.com/articles/d/drug_discovery.htm
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg12216612.800-pharmaceuticals-company-coerced-the-press.html
Sankalpa’s first short film highlights the problem of valium and alcohol addiction in Finglas
Wednesday, October 6th, 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.
As a first film for Sankalpa ‘The Pharm’ provides a realistic portrait of the problems some women face when trying to deal with stress or depression. The film highlights the ease at which doctors prescribe valium and how prescription medication does not really deal with the underlying causes of the problem. There is clear evidence in the research literature that valium is widely used by heroin users. Valium is sold openly in the city centre. Some drug users secure a valium prescription from their doctors and then sell it on to supplement their income and to buy other drugs. Recent research in the Irish context indicated that the prescribing of valium and other benzodiazepines increased with increasing levels of material deprivation. There is also evidence indicating that prescribing of benzodiazepines is significantly higher among females than males. Valium is being prescribed as a social support drug in the absence of adequate community services. But the long term cost of this approach has yet to be calculated. Our reliance on drugs to solve social problems has become embedded in our culture and is being passed from one generation to the next. Then there the side effects such as liver damage especially when valium is combined with alcohol and other drugs. It is hoped that ‘The Pharm’ will help to highlight the issue and show that there are alternatives to the medical approach for anxiety and depression.
Sankalpa are running a competition in conjunction with the release of the film on the 8th of October. For further details see www.sankalpa.ie
The Pharm will premier at the Lighthouse Cinema on Friday the 8th of October and Minister Pat Carey will be in attendance.
Watch ‘The Pharm’ on youtube and win an iPod!
Wednesday, September 8th, 2010Would you like to win an iPod? Ok! On the 8th of October we will up load the full version of the ‘The Pharm’ to Youtube. All you have to do, is watch the film and answer a simple question and email your answer to hello@sankalpa.ie
You must be over 18 and from Ireland to enter. The competition opens on the 8th of October 2010. Full details of the competition will be published here before we up load the film to youtube.
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