IN THE LATE 1980s Tennessee ranked among the top 10 states in per capita consumption of several controlled substances 1999


     Related Videos

     Related Hubpages

    •  Doc. Url:    Embed Code: 

    • citeseer  status
      (0) (0 Votes)
      Views: (1014)   Date: (15-05-09)   Pages: ()
    • Author:  by In The Absence  

    • Abstract:  Background. In the 1980s, Tennessee ranked among the top 10 states in per capita consumption of several controlled substances. We describe efforts designed to reduce noncriminally motivated misprescribing in Tennessee, present Tennessee's recent Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) rankings, and suggest how physicians may reduce misprescribing.

         Related Documents

           Related Groups

             Related Science News

             More on Sciencestage

             Answers

             News
        • In Brazil, Google paves Facebook's path to the top
          SAO PAULO (Reuters) - Facebook's popularity in Brazil has exploded over the past year, and the company may have its biggest competitor to thank for it. In its recent initial public offering filing, Facebook said its number of active users in Brazil had nearly tripled in 2011, finally placing it ahead of Google Inc's Orkut service as the No. 1 social network in the country. "I can't think of an ...
        • In burning Honduras jail, inmates yelled for help
          Hector Daniel Martinez was asleep in a small metal bed, one of dozens stacked so high in a narrow barrack that they nearly touched the roof, when the flames started.
        • In Pakistan, rightwing alliance is revived
          Bound together by hatred of the United States and support for insurgents fighting in Afghanistan, a revived coalition of supposedly banned Islamist extremists and rightwing political parties is drawing large crowds across Pakistan.
        • US missiles 'kill 13' in Pakistan
          Two US drone strikes struck Islamist militants in Pakistan's tribal badlands on Thursday, killing at least 13 fighters in North Waziristan near the Afghan border, officials said.
        • Afghan leader in Pakistan to discuss peace talks
          Afghan President Hamid Karzai is expected to press Pakistan during a visit that began Thursday on specific steps Islamabad can take to facilitate peace talks with the Afghan Taliban.
        • Interracial marriage in US hits new high: 1 in 12
          Interracial marriages in the U.S. have climbed to 4.8 million — a record 1 in 12 — as a steady flow of new Asian and Hispanic immigrants expands the pool of prospective spouses. Blacks are now substantially more likely than before to marry whites.
        • Home sales fall in January from December
          TORONTO (Reuters) - Sales of existing homes in Canada fell 4.5 percent in January from December, the Canadian Real Estate Association said on Wednesday in the latest sign the once hot market is cooling. The industry group also said the number of newly listed homes edged down 1.4 percent on a month-over-month basis. On a year-on-year basis, however, sales (not seasonally adjusted) were up 4 ...
        • Iranian bomber maimed in blasts in Thai capital
          BANGKOK (Reuters) - An Iranian man was seriously wounded in Bangkok on Tuesday when a bomb he was carrying exploded and blew one of his legs off in an incident Israel said was an attempted terrorist attack by Iran. Shortly beforehand, there had been an explosion in a house the man was renting in the Ekamai area of central Bangkok. Soon after that, there was a third blast on a nearby road, Thai ...
        • California economy to slowly improve in 2012: study
          LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - California's economy, the biggest in the United States and the ninth-largest in the world, will see a slight improvement in 2012 but a recovery in the crucial housing market is at least two years away, according to a report released on Wednesday. California was one of states hardest hit by the 2007-2009 recession and will continue to lag national economic indicators as ...
        • Qaeda militant killed by brother in Yemen: officials
          SANAA (Reuters) - A leader of al Qaeda's wing in Yemen was killed by his brother at a mosque on Thursday in a family dispute that also led to the brother being killed in a revenge attack, according to tribal and security sources. Tareq al-Dahab, brother-in-law of slain U.S.-born cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, was killed with five bodyguards by his brother Hizam and fighters from the Dahab tribe while ...

             Related on Wikipedia




























         

        Powered free by PHPmotion