Saturday, August 11, 2007
Britney Spears Drug Lollipops Accusation: Mom, Detox Doc to Intervene?
11:15 AM
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Is Britney Spears hooked on some sort of a lollipop that is laced with a narcotic? A new report from the National Enquirer claims that Britney's mom Lynne first heard of her daughter's use what is called "the drug-laced lollipops" when Britney detailed her drug history before being admitted to rehab, an insider tells the Enquirer in this week's blockbuster story.Now it is being reported that Britney's mom and K-Fed have joined forces and Federline is going after custody. Although Britney has denied having a drug or alcohol problem, she spent a month at Promises rehab in Malibu earlier this year. However the fallen pop tart blames mom and K-Fed for her stay there.The Enquirer reports that a detox doc can save Britney. The Enquirer reports that top detox specialist Dr. Stuart Finkelstein rushed to Brit’s Beverly Hills mansion during her recent crisis, sources say. "Britney was in a really bad way – even for her," a close friend of the singer told the magazine."She was extremely depressed, seemingly disoriented and out of control. She’d just finalized some tour date, and she realized that she had to get herself together if she was going to go out on the road and perform." The report claims that Britney contacted Dr. Finkelstein – called Dr. Stuey by some of his patients, who has also treated Michael Jackson and Robert Downey Jr."Dr. Stuey has treated Britney before, so she felt comfortable calling him again," said her friend. "Even though it was Sunday, she begged him to drive to Beverly Hills. Obviously, Dr. Stuey felt Britney’s condition was serious enough for him to drop what he was doing and rush up to see her."If she’s serious about staying clean, she’s on the right track with Dr. Finkelstein, an internal medicine physician who developed a ground-breaking technique called “blood cleansing.” He uses a pharmacological innovation called Suboxone, which allows patients to detox on an outpatient basis. Approved by the FDA in 2002, Suboxone is one of the first addiction-fighting drugs that can be prescribed and administered from a doctor’s office.
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