Tag Archives: drugs

Is It Legal To Buy Steroids Online In UK Without A Prescription?

Are you looking for some fine steroid stuff? You may find tons of info online, but you can find really nice steroid information here. ‘Steroids’ is general for a wide range of synthetic drugs on the market. ‘Steroids’ is a shorthand way of referring to corticosteroid medicines (taken to reduce asthma inflammation) in context of Asthma. ‘Steroids’ also include sex hormones or steroid hormones, which are the drugs derived from testosterone. These drugs are also called anabolic steroids.

There is a number of slang or street terms often used for steroids include abolic, anadrol, arnolds, georgia home boy, ghb (gamma hydroxybutyrate), gym candy, hype, juice, pumpers, roids, weight trainers, and stackers. Stacking is street term for taking steroids without a prescription. Anabolic steroids are often used by weightlifters, bodybuilders, athletes, and other sports persons to enhance their performance levels, power, and stamina.

Medically, anabolic steroids are often used to treat the disorders that occur due to abnormally low amounts of testosterone production in the body; some of the conditions include delayed puberty and some types of impotence. Anabolic steroids are also used treat uncontrolled weight loss in wasting diseases, such as AIDS and other diseases that result in loss of lean muscle mass.

Steroids help you live stronger and healthy life if they are used rightly at later age. Dr. Alan Mintz, the founder of the Las Vegas-based Cenegenics Medical Institute, says, “Under strict medical supervision, study after study has shown that steroids taken in low doses do not cause health problems. Nothing is going to make you live longer, but age management can help you live better.” However, steroid abuse or over-does may have serious side effects.

You can easily buy steroids from market. There is a wide range of steroids available on the market. Steroids are available as gels, pills, injections or creams. Some of steroids available on the market include Arimidex, Methandriol Dipropionate, Oxymetholone, Testosterone undecanoate, Cytomel, Testosterone Eenanthate, Boldenone Undeclynate, Tamoxifen, Nandrolone Phenylpropionate, Clomid, Clenbuterol, Dianabol, Gonadotropin, Testosterone Cypionate, Masteron, Parabolan, Primobolan, Nandrolone Decanoate, Turanabol, Trenabol, Proviron, Somatotropin, Oxandrolone, Steroids Cycles, Sustanon, and Testosterone Propionate.

You can buy steroids offline as well as online. There are numerous sites helping you buy steroids online. Internet offers you easy & convenient way to buy steroids. You can buy steroids from your home, office or any where using internet. It’s rather easy to buy steroids online. You just need a PC connected to Internet and you can buy steroids with few clicks of your mouse.

However, whenever you buy real steroids , always do make sure that you buy real steroids. Thus, you should always buy steroids from a genuine and reliable online drug store. Please don’t buy steroids from the sites that offer fake and counterfeit steroids. Also, please don’t buy steroids that are illegal in your respective countries.

Steroids Less Harmful Than Alcohol And Tobacco Says UK Report

Alcohol is the most dangerous drug in the UK by a considerable margin, beating heroin and crack cocaine into second and third place, according to an authoritative study published today which will reopen calls for the drugs classification system to be scrapped and a concerted campaign launched against drink.

Led by the sacked government drugs adviser David Nutt with colleagues from the breakaway Independent Scientific Committee on Drugs, the study says that if drugs were classified on the basis of the harm they do, alcohol would be class A, alongside heroin and crack cocaine.

Today’s paper, published by the respected Lancet medical journal, will be seen as a challenge to the government to take on the fraught issue of the relative harms of legal and illegal drugs, which proved politically damaging to Labour.

Nutt was sacked last year by the home secretary at the time, Alan Johnson, for challenging ministers’ refusal to take the advice of the official Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs, which he chaired. The committee wanted cannabis to remain a class C drug and for ecstasy to be downgraded from class A, arguing that these were less harmful than other drugs. Nutt claimed scientific evidence was overruled for political reasons.

The new paper updates a study carried out by Nutt and others in 2007, which was also published by the Lancet and triggered debate for suggesting that legally available alcohol and tobacco were more dangerous than cannabis and LSD.

Alcohol, in that paper, ranked fifth most dangerous overall. The 2007 paper also called for an overhaul of the drug classification system, but critics disputed the criteria used to rank the drugs and the absence of differential weighting.

Today’s study offers a more complex analysis that seeks to address the 2007 criticisms. It examines nine categories of harm that drugs can do to the individual “from death to damage to mental functioning and loss of relationships” and seven types of harm to others. The maximum possible harm score was 100 and the minimum zero.

Overall, alcohol scored 72 – against 55 for heroin and 54 for crack. The most dangerous drugs to their individual users were ranked as heroin, crack and then crystal meth. The most harmful to others were alcohol, heroin and crack in that order.

Nutt told the Guardian the drug classification system needed radical change. “The Misuse of Drugs Act is past its sell-by date and needs to be redone,” he said. “We need to rethink how we deal with drugs in the light of these new findings.”

For overall harm, the other drugs examined ranked as follows: crystal meth (33), cocaine (27), tobacco (26), amphetamine/speed (23), cannabis (20), GHB (18), benzodiazepines (15), ketamine (15), methadone (13), butane (10), qat (9), ecstasy (9), anabolic steroids (9), LSD (7), buprenorphine (6) and magic mushrooms (5).

The authors write: “Our findings lend support to previous work in the UK and the Netherlands, confirming that the present drug classification systems have little relation to the evidence of harm. They also accord with the conclusions of previous expert reports that aggressively targeting alcohol harm is a valid and necessary public health strategy.”

Nutt told the Lancet a new classification system “would depend on what set of harms ‘to self or others’ you are trying to reduce”. He added: “But if you take overall harm, then alcohol, heroin and crack are clearly more harmful than all others, so perhaps drugs with a score of 40 or more could be class A; 39 to 20 class B; 19-10 class C and 10 or under class D.” This would result in tobacco being labelled a class B drug alongside cocaine. Cannabis would also just make class B, rather than class C. Ecstasy and LSD would end up in the lowest drug category, D.

He was not suggesting classification was unnecessary: “We do need a classification system – we do need to regulate the ones that are very harmful to individuals like heroin and crack cocaine.” But he thought the UK could learn from the Portuguese and Dutch: “They have innovative policies which could reduce criminalisation.” Representatives of both countries will be at a summit in London today, called drug science and drug policy: building a consensus, where the study will be presented.

UK reformers will be hoping the coalition government will take a more evidence-based approach to classification and tackling drugs than Labour did. The Liberal Democrats supported Nutt over his sacking, while Conservative leader David Cameron, who got into trouble at Eton, aged 15, for smoking cannabis, acknowledged the Misuse of Drugs Act was not working during his time as an MP on the Home Affairs select committee.

Nutt called for far more effort to be put into reducing harm caused by alcohol, pointing out that its economic costs, as well as the costs to society of addiction and broken families, are very high. Taxation on alcohol is “completely inappropriate”, he said – with strong cider, for instance, taxed at a fifth of the rate of wine – and action should particularly target the low cost and promotion of alcohol such as Bacardi breezers to young people.

Don Shenker, the chief executive of Alcohol Concern, said : “What this study and new classification shows is that successive governments have mistakenly focused attention on illicit drugs, whereas the pervading harms from alcohol should have given a far higher priority. Drug misusers are still ten times more likely to receive support for their addiction than alcohol misusers, costing the taxpayer billions in repeat hospital admissions and alcohol related crime. Alcohol misuse has been exacerbated in recent years as government failed to accept the link between cheap prices, higher consumption and resultant harms to individuals and society.”

“[The] government should now urgently ensure alcohol is made less affordable and invest in prevention and treatment services to deal with the rise in alcohol dependency that has occurred.”

The Home Office said last night: “We have not read the report. This government has just completed an alcohol consultation and will publish a drugs strategy in the coming months.”

A Department of Health spokesperson said: “In England, most people drink once a week or less. If you’re a women and stick to two to three units a day or a man and drink up to three or four units, you are unlikely to damage your health. The government is determined to prevent alcohol abuse without disadvantaging those who drink sensibly.”Two experts from the Amsterdam National Institute for Public Health and the Environment and the Amsterdam Institute for Addiction Research point out in a Lancet commentary the study does not look at multiple drug use, which can make some drugs much more dangerous – such as cocaine or cannabis together with alcohol – but they acknowledge the topic was outside its scope.

They add that because the pattern of recreational drug use changes, the study should be repeated every five or 10 years.

UK Gays and Lesbians more likely to use Steroids than heterosexuals

Gay men and lesbians are markedly more likely to use illegal drugs than straight people, a Home Office-funded study says.

The UK Drug Policy Commission, which carried out the study, has called for a review of how drug services treat minority groups.

The report reviewed studies on illegal drug use in ethnic minority groups, disabled people and the LGBT community.

It found that people who identified as lesbian, gay or bisexual were three times more likely to have taken drugs in their lifetime than heterosexual people.

The review estimated that 75 per cent of LGB people had taken illegal drugs at least once, while between 30 and 50 per cent had taken them in the last year.

Findings from the British Crime Survey estimate that ten per cent of heterosexuals took drugs last year, compared with 33 per cent of gay or bisexual people.

Most of the research relates to gay men and the most popular drugs for this group were cannabis and poppers.

Gay men were found to be most likely to use poppers, while cannabis was the most popular drug for lesbians.

Gay men were also found to be at risk from abusing drugs such as steroids and Viagra and a 2000 study of gay men in London gyms found one in seven had used steroids in the last 12 months.

A number of studies have suggested that Viagra use in particular is linked with sexual risks.

Other drugs commonly taken were cocaine, ecstasy, ketamine, amphetamine and methamphetamine (crystal meth).

The review also found that the LGBT community were most likely to be “early adopters” of new drugs and may experience problems and side effects before the rest of the population.

However, the study authors warned that much of the evidence was “extremely limited and often of poor quality” and although the most comprehensive available, “should be interpreted with caution”.

There was little evidence available on drug abuse in bisexual and trans people.

Health services often focused on heroin and crack cocaine, the report said, meaning that problems with drugs in the LGBT community – which tends not to use these drugs – were often not adequately addressed.

It recommended that a ‘kite mark’ system be developed to mark out mainstream health services which demonstrate good practice in dealing with drug problems in the LGBT community and also suggested different approaches to raising awareness, such as internet sites, new social media campaigns and events at community venues.

Ruth Hunt, Stonewall’s head of policy, said: “We welcome the work of the Home Office and are pleased that the government is looking at how lesbian and gay people can be encouraged to seek help about drug abuse.

“The study confirms what Stonewall has known for some time – that LGB people use drugs more than heterosexual people but don’t feel able to seek advice from the health service.

“The NHS needs to target lesbian and gay people to encourage them to seek advice.”

Ms Hunt added that when LGB people wish to seek advice on drugs, they must first talk about their sexual health. She said this “completely excludes” lesbians.

Pink News UK