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Opioids
The Good, the Bad, and the Very Bad
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Narrado por:
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Michael Bridges
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De:
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Tamzin Haleshenk
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Opioids are among the most misunderstood medicines of the modern age. For some people, they represent the moment pain finally loosens its grip after surgery, injury, or serious illness. For others, they represent something far darker: dependence, withdrawal, overdose, and grief that arrives too suddenly and stays too long. The truth is that opioids can be both life-changing and life-ending, sometimes within the same life story. That is why this book exists.
Opioids: The Good, The Bad and the Very Bad is a clear, compassionate guide to one of the most complex health issues of our time. Written for general listeners, it explains what opioids are, how they work, why they can feel so effective, and how their risks can quietly grow. It does not rely on fear or moral panic, and it does not shame people who have become dependent. Instead, it treats pain and addiction as real human experiences that deserve understanding, honesty, and practical help.
This book begins with the long story of the poppy: how opium moved from ancient remedy to modern pharmaceutical industry, and how morphine, heroin, and prescription painkillers reshaped medicine. It then explores where opioids genuinely shine: trauma, post-operative pain, severe injury, cancer care, and end-of-life comfort. You will learn what appropriate use looks like, why short-term relief can be profoundly important, and why careful prescribing matters.
From there, the book takes you inside the body in plain English. It explains opioid receptors, tolerance, sedation, and the brain’s reward system, showing how a drug that reduces pain can also reshape the nervous system’s expectations. You will understand why opioids can create dependence even when taken exactly as prescribed, why withdrawal feels so overwhelming, and how a person can drift from “needing relief” to “needing normal” without ever intending to.
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