Showing posts with label science writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label science writing. Show all posts

Sunday, April 28, 2013

Addiction Inbox (D)Evolves Into Paperback


A curated collection of blog posts in print.

Online is where journalism is happening now, but it is a truism that most of the world’s repository of knowledge is still found in books. It is also true that Addiction Inbox now comes in paperback, from Amazon. For cheap. Also available in Kindle, for unbelievably cheap.

 I have selected and arranged a “best of the blog” collection,  meant to serve as a handy off-the-shelf compendium of science-based information on drugs and addiction. Is shoplifting the opiate of the masses? Does menthol really matter? Can ketamine and other party drugs cause permanent bladder damage? The posts are arranged in four sections: Research, The New Synthetics, Treatment, and Interviews/Book Reviews. This 330-page anthology of articles is designed to bring multiple perspectives to bear on questions of drugs, addiction, and treatment. For just ridiculously cheap.

Cassie Rodenberg at Scientific American’s White Noise blog was kind enough to review Addiction Inbox, the book: “The author relates the real life to the scientific, noting his own struggles with addiction, yet doesn’t get bogged down in personal tales. Rather, the writings use life tidbits as jumping off points for scientific explanation and an overarching discussion of addiction’s media landscape.”

Which was pretty much what I was hoping to do when I started this blog….

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Bath Salts and the College on Problems of Drug Dependence


CPDD holds annual meeting.

I’ll be out of the office for a few days, attending the annual meeting of the College on Problems of Drug Dependence (CPDD), the oldest group in the United States dedicated to addressing problems of drug addiction. The organization functions as an independent body, and is affiliated with other scientific and professional societies involved in the study of drug dependence and abuse. The meeting dovetails with the 2012 NIDA International Forum. A broad selection of the nation’s top drug and addiction researchers will be there, along with Nora Volkow, Director of the National Institute of Drug Abuse (NIDA), and Drug Czar Gil Kerlikowske, director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy.

 I’m pleased to be the recipient of the organization’s 2012 CPDD/NIDA Media Award, which is given each year for “contributions through the media that have enhanced the public understanding of scientific issues concerning drug use disorders.” That’s pretty nice of them, and you can find an interview I did for their CPDD blog HERE.

While in attendance, your faithful correspondent will be attending what looks to be a massively interesting panel discussion called “A Stimulating Soak in “Bath Salts”: Investigating Cathinone Derivative Drugs.” Look for a blog post on that one.

I’m also planning to attend a symposium on “Exercise as a Treatment for Drug Dependence in Humans,” and plan to report back on that topic as well.
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