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Pennsylvania/category/colorado/pennsylvania Treatment Centers

in Pennsylvania/category/colorado/pennsylvania


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Drug Facts


  • The most commonly abused prescription drugs are pain medications, sleeping pills, anti-anxiety medications and stimulants (used to treat attention deficit/hyperactivity disorders).1
  • LSD (or its full name: lysergic acid diethylamide) is a potent hallucinogen that dramatically alters your thoughts and your perception of reality.
  • Over 60% of teens report that drugs of some kind are kept, sold, and used at their school.
  • Over a quarter million of drug-related emergency room visits are related to heroin abuse.
  • Powder cocaine is a hydrochloride salt derived from processed extracts of the leaves of the coca plant. 'Crack' is a type of processed cocaine that is formed into a rock-like crystal.
  • Nearly 50% of all emergency room admissions from poisonings are attributed to drug abuse or misuse.
  • Daily hashish users have a 50% chance of becoming fully dependent on it.
  • In 2013, more high school seniors regularly used marijuana than cigarettes as 22.7% smoked pot in the last month, compared to 16.3% who smoked cigarettes.
  • In Connecticut overdoses have claimed at least eight lives of high school and college-age students in communities large and small in 2008.
  • According to a new survey, nearly two thirds of young women in the United Kingdom admitted to binge drinking so excessively they had no memory of the night before the next morning.
  • Drugs are divided into several groups, depending on how they are used.
  • Authority obtains over 10,500 accounts of clonazepam abuse annually.
  • 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.
  • Crystal Meth is the world's second most popular illicit drug.
  • 18 percent of drivers killed in a crash tested positive for at least one drug.
  • Crack cocaine, a crystallized form of cocaine, was developed during the cocaine boom of the 1970s and its use spread in the mid-1980s.
  • Amphetamines are the fourth most popular street drug in England and Wales, and second most popular worldwide.
  • 86.4 percent of people ages 18 or older reported that they drank alcohol at some point in their lifetime.
  • Some common street names for Amphetamines include: speed, uppers, black mollies, blue mollies, Benz and wake ups.
  • One in ten high school seniors in the US admits to abusing prescription painkillers.

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