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Welcome to Phoenix Safes.

Phoenix Safe company is one of the oldest manufacturers of safes and security products in Great Britain and can trace its history back to Liverpool in 1799 where it produced steel banded wooden strongboxes for the merchant fleets sailing to the Americas.

We are now a world leader manufacturing a range of state of the art safes to suit all requirements, ranging from lockable key boxes right through to our top-of-the-range Millennium Duplex 4630 data protection safe series. The Millennium Duplex offers unrivalled protection for documents and data, protecting your essential computer data and software on media such as CD-ROM and diskette. The Millennium Duplex is tested to give 2 hours fire protection at temperatures over 1100°C and to survive a falling through the floors of a burning and collapsing building.

The range includes the popular Centurion 1240 fire safe series. The Centurion, available in three sizes, is 1 hour fire resistant at temperatures of up 1000°C for paper documents. All of our fire resistant safes are independently tested to a UK, European and American test standards

Cash Box Information

Cash Boxes

Cash Boxes

A sturdy range of conveniently sized cash boxes for domestic or office use.

  • Four different sizes available to suit every need.
  • Available in high quality red or cream powder coated finish.
  • Convenient carrying handle and quality keylock.
  • Supplied with plastic divider for coins and notes.

*Ratings are approximate only and may vary due to area conditions and location. Please check with your underwriter

Cash Box 0014/0015

  • A 150mm x 110mm x 70mm

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Cash Box 0016/0017

  • A 200mm x 160mm x 70mm

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Cash Box 0018/0019

  • A 250mm x 180mm x 70mm

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Cash Box 0020/0021

  • A 300mm x 240mm x 70mm

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Phoenix Safes for 2007

BBC NEWS | Health | Chemical may stop alcohol craving

Chemical may stop alcohol craving


Wine

The research could help those dependent on alcohol



Scientists say they have found a way to stop an alcoholic’s craving for drink.

A team from Melbourne’s Howard Florey Institute
discovered blocking the action of the brain’s orexin system can also
prevent someone relapsing.

Team members say their work could lead to the development of drugs which could act as orexin blockers.

Orexin-producing cells are also thought to play a part
in regulating feeding, so the researchers believe they could also help
treat eating disorders.



There will be no magic bullet in the treatment of alcohol disorders

Bob Patton, National Addiction Centre

Alcohol-related deaths and illness are an increasing problem in the UK.

Deaths rose to 8,386 in 2005 compared to 4,144 in 2001, according to figures from the Office for National Statistics.

And hospital admissions for alcoholic liver disease have more than doubled in a decade, reaching 35,400 in 2004/5.

Detox

Orexin cells are in a part of the brain called the hypothalamus.

The chemical is involved in the “high” felt after drinking alcohol or taking illicit drugs.

In rat studies, a team led by Dr Andrew Lawrence created a compound which was seen to block the “euphoric” effects of orexin.

In one experiment, rats that had alcohol freely available to them stopped drinking it after receiving the orexin blocker.

In a second, rats that had gone through a detox
programme and were then given the orexin blocking drug did not show any
interest in alcohol when they were re-exposed to the kind of
environment which they had been conditioned to associate with alcohol
use.

Dr Lawrence said: “Orexin reinforces the euphoria felt
when drinking alcohol, so if a drug can be developed to block the
orexin system in humans, we should be able to stop an alcoholic’s
craving for alcohol, as well as preventing relapse once the alcoholic
has recovered.”

He added: “Our research shows that alcohol addiction and
eating disorders set off common triggers in the brain, so further
investigations may uncover drug targets in the orexin system to treat
both conditions.”

The scientists are now carrying out further studies to discover exactly how the orexin system is activated.

Reducing cravings

Dr Lawrence said: “Before a therapeutic orexin-blocking
drug can be developed, we need to ensure that it will be safe to use in
the long-term and that issues surrounding a person’s compliance in
taking the drug are considered.”

Bob Patton, a health psychologist at the UK’s National
Addiction Centre, said: “The results of this preliminary research are
certainly interesting; however more research is required to determine
if it works on the complex human brain.

“We already know that [the drugs] Acamprosate and Naltrexone can help reduce cravings and promote abstinence.

“This study offers a further line of investigation that
could eventually help the one million alcohol dependant adults in the
UK.

“Of course there will be no magic bullet in the
treatment of alcohol disorders; pharmacological treatments work in
conjunction with psychological therapies to help address the symptoms
of dependence.

“And in the future, work on the genetic basis for
addiction could help to determine which treatments work best for
particular individuals.”




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Alcohol Craving sorted?


Happy Christmas Holidays Everyone
We will be back on January 2nd though Emails will be read between now and the 2nd.
Thank you for all your support this year and we hope you will join us in 2007.

Health, Happiness and Peace.

Best Wishes
Bob
Merlin Industrial Products Ltd

Happy Christmas