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PROTOXYDE D’AZOTE

En octobre, à Vigneulles-lès-Hattonchâtel, un ado de 15 ans a été retrouvé mort, près du stade de foot. Deux jeunes en quelques mois. « Le premier consommait du protoxyde d’azote dans un contexte festif, le deuxième avait une pratique addictive et isolée », nous explique Bruno Frémont, médecin légiste à Verdun qui a autopsié les deux corps.

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Alors que la question de la dépénalisation du cannabis défraie régulièrement la chronique, voici 15 raisons, de ne pas donner un signal d'innocuité fallacieux à notre jeunesse:

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A l'occasion du débat sur la dépénalisation du cannabis qui agite régulièrement la scène médiatique, Patrice Tran Ba Huy, professeur de Médecine à la Faculté Saint-Louis-Lariboisière, membre de l'Académie nationale de Médecine et président de la société française d'ORL, explique quelles sont les redoutables conséquences sanitaires qu'amplifierait sans nul doute pareille décision. Lire l'article.

Alors que le pojet de dépénalisation du cannabis revient régulièrement sur le devant de la scène, une mère de famille tire la sonnette d'alarme.

Voir l'article de presse sur ce fléau.

 

We notice that many parents want more and more information on the products, the exact consequences of their consumption...They would like to see pictures, to understand how drugs affect the body, their exact impact on the brain – (as if the human being is nothing but a brain, as some would have us believe)... This intellectual approach would be totally legitimate were it not for its consequences: we get drowned in the details and pushed further away from our objective of prevention.

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If your child meets at least 8 of the following criteria for longer than 6 months, he will be considered hyperactive  

(extract from The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), published by the American Psychiatric Association).Enfant qui saute

  1. Fidgets with his hands or feet, or squirms in his seat
  2. Has difficulty in remaining seated
  3. Is easily distracted by outside stimuli
  4. Has difficulty waiting for his turn while playing or in group situations
  5. Answers questions before they are finished
  6. Has difficulty in following instructions that are given to him
  7. Has difficulty in keeping his attention on something
  8. Switches between activities without finishing them
  9. Has difficulty in playing quietly
  10. Is overly talkative
  11. Often interrupts others
  12. Seems not to listen to what he is told
  13. Often forgets his things
  14. Is often involved in dangerous activities without being aware of their consequences

And if he is diagnosed as hyperactive he will be prescribed ritalin, the obedience pill, called “kiddy coke”, with disastrous effects. The chemical structure of methylphenidate, Ritalin, is that of phenylethylamine, which has pharmacological properties similar to those of amphetamins.

People will tell you that Ritalin will enable your child to focus better, etc. That might be true for the first weeks, as with any psychostimulant, but your child will be influenced by an amphetamine with all the associated  disastrous secondary effects such as

  1. Sleep disorders
  2. Over stimulation
  3. anorexia
  4. psychoses (suicidal ideation, paranoia)
  5. Tactile hallucinations, eg Itchiness of the extremities
  6. Arterial hypertension, myocardial infarctus and pulmonary embolism
  7. Pulmonary embolism. Amphetamines, even at therapeutic doses, are suspected of inducing of pulmonary arterial hypertension and respiratory depression
  8. Acute renal failure




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