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Pennsylvania/category/arkansas/pennsylvania Treatment Centers

in Pennsylvania/category/arkansas/pennsylvania


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Drug Facts


  • A heroin overdose causes slow and shallow breathing, blue lips and fingernails, clammy skin, convulsions, coma, and can be fatal.
  • Steroids can cause disfiguring ailments such as baldness in girls and severe acne in all who use them.
  • 80% of methadone-related deaths were deemed accidental, even though most cases involved other drugs.
  • Depressants, opioids and antidepressants are responsible for more overdose deaths (45%) than cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine and amphetamines (39%) combined
  • Emergency room admissions from prescription opiate abuse have risen by over 180% over the last five years.
  • The drug Diazepam has over 500 different brand-names worldwide.
  • Chronic crystal meth users also often display poor hygiene, a pale, unhealthy complexion, and sores on their bodies from picking at 'crank bugs' - the tactile hallucination that tweakers often experience.
  • Medical consequences of chronic heroin injection abuse include scarred and/or collapsed veins, bacterial infections of the blood vessels and heart valves, abscesses (boils) and other soft-tissue infections, and liver or kidney disease.
  • In 2007, methamphetamine lab seizures increased slightly in California, but remained considerably low compared to years past.
  • Over 2.3 million people admitted to have abused Ketamine in their lifetime.
  • Despite 20 years of scientific evidence showing that drug treatment programs do work, the feds fail to offer enough of them to prisoners.
  • Narcotics are sometimes necessary to treat both psychological and physical ailments but the use of any narcotic can become habitual or a dependency.
  • From 1992 to 2003, teen abuse of prescription drugs jumped 212 percent nationally, nearly three times the increase of misuse among other adults.
  • Taking Ecstasy can cause liver failure.
  • There were over 190,000 hospitalizations in the U.S. in 2008 due to inhalant poisoning.
  • Painkillers are among the most commonly abused prescription drugs.
  • 26.9 percent of people ages 18 or older reported that they engaged in binge drinking in the past month.
  • The most commonly abused brand-name painkillers include Vicodin, Oxycodone, OxyContin and Percocet.
  • In 2012, over 16 million adults were prescribed Adderall.
  • Non-pharmaceutical fentanyl is sold in the following forms: as a powder; spiked on blotter paper; mixed with or substituted for heroin; or as tablets that mimic other, less potent opioids.

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