Addiction among women

Addiction policy has been managing by the Iranian regime and increased among women in Iran 2020-04-22 The IRGC mafia and all security agencies in Iran, with propagating and distribution types of drugs and opioids especially synthetic opioids and NPS (like heroin and novel psychoactive substances) among Iranian society.

 

Social problems such as addiction to opioids concurrently and symmetric with the establishment of the Islamic Republic have been significantly increasing. It is remarkable, in the engineering of the regime policies, in Iran, the young women and girls are targeted. Some research suggests that women are more sensitive to pain and may experience chronic pain more often than men. Women are also more likely to misuse prescription opioids (like oxycodone) and synthetic opioids (like heroin) to self-medicate for pain or anxiety. Furthermore, women develop a dependence on opioids faster than men due to a heightened dopamine response in the brain. Even so, more men misuse opioids, and more men fatally overdose as a result of abuse.
The IRGC mafia and all security agencies in Iran, with propagating and distribution types of the drugs and opioids especially synthetic opioids and NPS (like heroin and novel psychoactive substances) among Iranian society, also with transit and macro exports the drugs and opioids to other countries in the region and world make billions of dollars and spend billions and billions of dollars to support the global dangerous terrorism.
The IRGC leaders from past to today, have been directly related to drug trafficking, and have a relationship with gangs and mafia of the drug trafficking in other countries.
According to reports, just 8 percent of the whole of drugs and opioids in Iran have been detected, and the remaining of that transition and distribution and trafficking via the IRGC.
Also, in the past years, the regime with approval of the discernment assembly announced the breeding of some drugs in Iran has been unobstructed and so they officially were given a legal mode of the distribution of opioid in Iran.
Women face tougher challenges. They tend to progress more quickly from using an addictive substance to dependence (a phenomenon known as telescoping). They also develop medical or social consequences of addiction faster than men, often find it harder to quit using addictive substances, and are more susceptible to relapse. These gender differences can affect treatment.
Also, women are more likely than men to receive prescriptions for opioids, perhaps because they are more likely to suffer from chronic pain conditions such as fibromyalgia. Women are more likely than men to visit emergency rooms because they abused opioids, suggesting (although not proving) that they suffer more medical consequences.
Over 20 years, a growing body of evidence reveals that women who are addicted to substances often face challenges that men do not. A better appreciation of gender differences should help women avoid the pitfalls of substance use and help clinicians help women with addiction achieve sobriety.
Examples of increased addiction among the women and girls include easy access to drugs and opioids, the abuse of women and girls (such as emotional abuse, physical abuse, sexual abuse and etc.) poverty, a social disorder, and hundreds of other things, which the basic cause of those is the Islamic Republic regime.
International Network Iranian Kurdistan  Human rights 

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