Very few "sane" people commit suicide.
.............. Very few "sane" people commit suicide.
Matt
Chances are it's the addiction that has caused the mental issues in the first place.I can only ever feel very sad that some dies of an addiction, they are in a very bad place mentally and as such arent firing on all cylinders. It's easy to be judgemental when you're in a good place mentally and cant understand what its like to not be so fortunate. Very few "sane" people commit suicide.
Matt
Too many Wonderwoman comics?Heroine overdose apparently.
Genuinely puzzles why people do tbh.Well, we can only speculate.
Genuinely puzzles why people do tbh.
Heroin is "likely" to have played a role in the death of Peaches Geldof, an inquest has revealed.
Which isn't always an indication of suicide. Could be that the effects caused her to die from another cause, ie falling down the stairs. Could be the purity was higher than she thought and it was an inadvertent overdose.
Just because drugs were involved it does, if indeed they were, that they were the direct cause of death.
The full inquest will be heard in the fullness of time, at end of that the cause and manner of her death will be known.
didn't leave home that day apparently and heroin was found in her body, yet the police found no evidence of drug equipment in her house.
The question to be answered is, she didn't leave home that day apparently and heroin was found in her body, yet the police found no evidence of drug equipment in her house.
So who cleared up before calling the police?
Who says anything was cleared up?
Heroin can be taken in many different forms
Can you explain how you take heroin and leave no trace?
if she hasnt topped herself then wtf was she doing jacking up while looking after her children, drugs like these have no part in our society and the penalties for dealing and using need to be much harder
My understanding from following this is that Peaches never got over her mothers suicide and decided to take her own life in the same way her mother did.
Obblox! Diamorphine is used a lot in the medical profession and is an incredibly effective form of pain relief. Had she been "jacking up" (as you so nicely put it [presumably in an attempt to seem "down wiv da kidz..."]) there would have been visible needle marks which would have been spotted far earlier in the investigation.
Indeed. More people have taken heroin than realise it. But they'd have been given it under its Sunday name of diamorphine.Obblox! Diamorphine is used a lot in the medical profession and is an incredibly effective form of pain relief. Had she been "jacking up" (as you so nicely put it [presumably in an attempt to seem "down wiv da kidz..."]) there would have been visible needle marks which would have been spotted far earlier in the investigation.
Easy answer.I could but I am not going to
Well, you're drawing a fair distinction between the "street" drug and the medical drug in terms of purity. But in both cases the active ingredient is exactly the same - diamorphine. Yes, street heroin will contain more impurities, but the point is that the experience of the active drug itself - the reason people abuse it - is more common than we often realise.it is however something of a fiction that diamophine and heroin are the same thing
for one thing the manfacturing process for diamophine is considerably more stringent and controlled in terms of removing impurities - which is why diamorphine is white powder and colourless when disolved whereas heroin resembles brown sugar (as the rolling stones told us 'brown sugar , you taste so good - that song wasn't about the great british bake off, or the joys of coloured girls ! )
and for another streeet heroin will be cut with all sorts of other agents (varying from harmless like milk sugar , to less harmless rat poison) in order to dilute it to make it go further.
Well, you're drawing a fair distinction between the "street" drug and the medical drug in terms of purity. But in both cases the active ingredient is exactly the same - diamorphine. Yes, street heroin will contain more impurities, but the point is that the experience of the active drug itself - the reason people abuse it - is more common than we often realise.it is however something of a fiction that diamophine and heroin are the same thing
for one thing the manfacturing process for diamophine is considerably more stringent and controlled in terms of removing impurities - which is why diamorphine is white powder and colourless when disolved whereas heroin resembles brown sugar (as the rolling stones told us 'brown sugar , you taste so good - that song wasn't about the great british bake off, or the joys of coloured girls ! )
and for another streeet heroin will be cut with all sorts of other agents (varying from harmless like milk sugar , to less harmless rat poison) in order to dilute it to make it go further.
Well, you're drawing a fair distinction between the "street" drug and the medical drug in terms of purity. But in both cases the active ingredient is exactly the same - diamorphine. Yes, street heroin will contain more impurities, but the point is that the experience of the active drug itself - the reason people abuse it - is more common than we often realise.
"Heroin" was actually the original brand name of the medical drug; and it was synthesised in an attempt to create a less abusable form of morphine.
Not necessarily. The pathologist will be testing for the presence of diamorphine which is exactly the same compound regardless of whether it's "street" or medical (they'll actually be looking for morphine metabolites).but the point is that a pathologist will be able to tell whether she had street heroin or diamophine in her blood
But I think we're addressing different points anyway. I was adding to the thread of conversation that started with someone saying that these drugs have absolutely no place in society.
They're not essentially different. Not in their desired effects. The drug itself - the active ingredient - is exactly the same.but even on that point - since dia mophine and street heroin are different , the person concerned was clearly saying that drugs such as street heroin have no place in society
Easy answer.
However:
Police discovered no sign of drugs paraphernalia at the home in Wrotham after she was found, prompting speculation that someone had cleaned the scene before they arrived.
Detectives are now expected to investigate what happened to items associated with either smoking or injecting heroin, which would have been expected to be found at the property.
Police are also expected to focus on who supplied the drug to Ms Geldof.