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Halfway houses in Pennsylvania/category/delaware/illinois/pennsylvania


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Drug Facts


  • American dies from a prescription drug overdose every 19 minutes.
  • Codeine is widely used in the U.S. by prescription and over the counter for use as a pain reliever and cough suppressant.
  • Pure Cocaine is extracted from the leaf of the Erythroxylon coca bush.
  • Daily hashish users have a 50% chance of becoming fully dependent on it.
  • 100 people die every day from drug overdoses. This rate has tripled in the past 20 years.
  • Fewer than one out of ten North Carolinian's who use illegal drugs, and only one of 20 with alcohol problems, get state funded help, and the treatment they do receive is out of date and inadequate.
  • By June 2011, the PCC had received over 3,470 calls about Bath Salts.
  • Over 600,000 people has been reported to have used ecstasy within the last month.
  • Heroin is manufactured from opium poppies cultivated in four primary source areas: South America, Southeast and Southwest Asia, and Mexico.
  • 30% of emergency room admissions from prescription abuse involve opiate-based substances.
  • Gangs, whether street gangs, outlaw motorcycle gangs or even prison gangs, distribute more drugs on the streets of the U.S. than any other person or persons do.
  • During the 1850s, opium addiction was a major problem in the United States.
  • From 1920- 1933, the illegal trade of Alcohol was a booming industry in the U.S., causing higher rates of crime than before.
  • The strongest risk for heroin addiction is addiction to opioid painkillers.
  • Crack Cocaine is the riskiest form of a Cocaine substance.
  • Slang Terms for Heroin:Smack, Dope, Junk, Mud, Skag, Brown Sugar, Brown, 'H', Big H, Horse, Charley, China White, Boy, Harry, Mr. Brownstone, Dr. Feelgood
  • New scientific research has taught us that the brain doesn't finish developing until the mid-20s, especially the region that controls impulse and judgment.
  • Cocaine increases levels of the natural chemical messenger dopamine in brain circuits controlling pleasure and movement.
  • Crack causes a short-lived, intense high that is immediately followed by the oppositeintense depression, edginess and a craving for more of the drug.
  • Women born after World War 2 were more inclined to become alcoholics than those born before 1943.

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