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Pennsylvania/category/js/pennsylvania Treatment Centers

in Pennsylvania/category/js/pennsylvania


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Drug Facts


  • For every dollar that you spend on treatment of substance abuse in the criminal justice system, it saves society on average four dollars.
  • Veterans who fought in combat had higher risk of becoming addicted to drugs or becoming alcoholics than veterans who did not see combat.
  • The United States consumes 80% of the world's pain medication while only having 6% of the world's population.
  • By 8th grade 15% of kids have used marijuana.
  • Children who learn the dangers of drugs and alcohol early have a better chance of not getting hooked.
  • Daily hashish users have a 50% chance of becoming fully dependent on it.
  • Heroin is known on the streets as: Smack, horse, black, brown sugar, dope, H, junk, skag, skunk, white horse, China white, Mexican black tar
  • Meth can lead to your body overheating, to convulsions and to comas, eventually killing you.
  • Rates of K2 Spice use have risen by 80% within a single year.
  • A tolerance to cocaine develops quicklythe addict soon fails to achieve the same high experienced earlier from the same amount of cocaine.
  • Children under 16 who abuse prescription drugs are at greater risk of getting addicted later in life.
  • From 1992 to 2003, teen abuse of prescription drugs jumped 212 percent nationally, nearly three times the increase of misuse among other adults.
  • 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.
  • 52 Million Americans have abused prescription medications.
  • There is inpatient treatment and outpatient.
  • Methadone accounts for nearly one third of opiate-associated deaths.
  • Selling and sharing prescription drugs is not legal.
  • Narcotics are used for pain relief, medical conditions and illnesses.
  • Alcohol-impaired driving fatalities accounted for 9,967 deaths (31 percent of overall driving fatalities).
  • In 2008, the Thurston County Narcotics Task Force seized about 700 Oxycontin tablets that had been diverted for illegal use, said task force commander Lt. Lorelei Thompson.

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