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home-detox-methods"home-detox-methods" How-to-pass-a-drug-test.net is available above.

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Do you find the world Detox products strange? The problem is, most companies out there do their best to make passing a drug test as confusing as possible. To pass a drug test isn't hard, just involves some solid advice and programs to pass your drug test that are built on common sense, not wishful thinking.

Detoxifying your body and learning how to pass a drug test is not a complicated thing. Most people do need help since everything you need to pass a drug test isn't lying around your house. People also need realistic and honest help assessing their situation since everyone's situation is different and one size does NOT fit all in the world of Detox.

Although our process of detoxifying the system takes some effort and discipline along with specific yet simple dietary restrictions. The results and the fact that we are the most copied in the industry, these facts speak for themselves. With the "DX series" program, your system will be permanently cleansed in 6-14 days and for your peace of mind, we include testing materials for you to see proof of results first hand.


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DRUG RESTRICTIONS CURTAIL ADDICTION TREATMENT

Thanks to Alec MacGillis and The Sun for highlighting the barriers that prevent physicians from prescribing buprenorphine, a safe and highly effective treatment for heroin addiction ( "Restrictions mute drug's promise," April 24 ).

Given the serious health, social and economic consequences of drug addiction in our nation, it is unfortunate that Congress took the unusual step of singling out buprenorphine--from among the 4,000 medications approved by the Food and Drug Administration--and attaching restrictions that effectively prohibit most physicians from prescribing it.  Group practices as well as individual doctors may treat no more than 30 patients with buprenorphine at a time, and physicians must undergo special training to prescribe it.

Our state has one of the highest rates of physicians who are able to prescribe the medication.  Nearly all of Baltimore's community health centers have made this treatment available, and many hospitals are using it to treat their patients.

In addition to removing the 30-patient restriction, we must encourage more physicians to acquire the required training to prescribe buprenorphine so that the many heroin-dependent individuals in Baltimore and throughout the state have convenient access to this treatment.

Robert Schwartz

Baltimore