Blog
Addicted at Birth
The Multidisciplinary Counterdrug Task Force Training: A Partnership Between the Florida National Guard and St. Petersburg College has developed a broadcast focusing on drug addicted infants.
Every day, babies are born addicted to prescription medications. They scream and twitch as their tiny bodies withdraw from the drugs their mothers took during pregnancy. All around the country, this problem grows as the number of prescription addicts rises. What can be done?
The broadcast is one hour long and is called Addicted at Birth. See how doctors, nurses, and other professionals treat these tiny addicts and why it is so expensive and time-consuming. You’ll learn why some pregnant women do not seek help during their pregnancy and why abruptly stopping prescription use can be harmful for both mother and the baby. Hear how law enforcement and other emergency responders play a big role in insuring help for the newborns.
Key Concepts:
- Understand the scope of the problem
- Learn how prescription-addicted babies are treated
- Understand why some pregnant women do not seek help
- See how law enforcement and emergency responders play a role in protecting these babies
For more information or to view the broadcast, please click here.
http://www.mctft.com/telecasts/view_course.aspx?telecastID=2012-03-29-1
- Umbilical Cord Tissue Testing for SSRIs
- A Comparison of Turnaround-Times for Two Popular Specimen Types Used for Newborn Toxicology: Meconium and Umbilical Cord Tissue
- Using Umbilical Cord Tissue to Identify Prenatal Ethanol Exposure and Co-exposure to Other Commonly Misused Substances
- Toxicology as a Diagnostic Tool to Identify the Misuse of Drugs in the Perinatal Period
- Specimen Delay
- Drug Classes and Neurotransmitters: Amphetamine, Cocaine, and Hallucinogens
- Environmental Exposure Testing for Delta-8 THC, Delta-9 THC, Delta-10 THC, and CBD
- Bromazolam and Synthetic Benzodiazepines
- October 2024 (5)
- March 2024 (1)
- February 2024 (1)
- January 2024 (3)
- December 2023 (1)
- November 2023 (1)