SofaGeorge
New member
badazzwhitedude said:
The only class of drugs that has a lack of medical use in this country are Schedule I drugs. All the other scheduled drugs have medical uses.
DeepZenPill is right. The potential for addiction/dependancy/abuse potential (whatever you want to call it) is the reason why some perscription drugs are scheduled in a certain class. They go hand in hand in many ways. Many of these addictions start out harmless.
For example, someone breaks their ankle or hurts their foot or something. He goes to the doctor and is perscribed some Vicodin for the pain for a few weeks. After their foot gets better, they no longer recieve the script. But the patient liked the drug so much he starts looking elsewhere for it to get that "high" or euphoric feeling again. Eventually, he may find a friend who has some extra pain killers laying around and he gets those. Then his buddy knows a drug dealer who gets them from time to time and starts getting them that way, etc. It's a rollercoaster ride, and if it gets bad enough, he will start taking 10+ pills a day at which point is dangerous and the person may require detox to come off of them. It all started at the doctor's office. With this in mind, which has more potential for abuse? Steroids or narcotic painkillers? I would think it's a no-brainer for most of us. And they are in the same class!
According to the government, this is less likely to happen with Xanax and Valium (Class IV drugs) and going to detox, more likely to happen with Lorcet and Vicodin (Class III drugs) and going to detox, and very likely to happen with Oxycontin and Methodone (Class II drugs) and going to detox. Class I drugs like Cocaine and Heroin have no medical uses in this country.
The point is, I don't see where steroids fall into any of this.And even if you wanted to say steroids are "abused" by a select few, what about other more dangerous things that are abused by a great many people such as cigarettes and alcohol?
You are clearly basing your writings on your suppositions... not an actual understanding of the Schedule process.