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in Pennsylvania/category/js/pennsylvania


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Drug Facts


  • Crystal Meth is commonly known as glass or ice.
  • Alcohol blocks messages trying to get to the brain, altering a person's vision, perception, movements, emotions and hearing.
  • High dosages of ketamine can lead to the feeling of an out of body experience or even death.
  • More than 100,000 babies are born addicted to cocaine each year in the U.S., due to their mothers' use of the drug during pregnancy.
  • Twenty-five percent of those who began abusing prescription drugs at age 13 or younger met clinical criteria for addiction sometime in their life.
  • Alcoholism has been found to be genetically inherited in some families.
  • Adolf von Baeyer, the creator of barbiturates, won a Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1905 for his work in in chemical research.
  • Methamphetamine can be detected for 2-4 days in a person's system.
  • Each year Alcohol use results in nearly 2,000 college student's deaths.
  • More than 10 percent of U.S. children live with a parent with alcohol problems.
  • Crystal meth is short for crystal methamphetamine.
  • 26.9 percent of people ages 18 or older reported that they engaged in binge drinking in the past month.
  • 193,717 people were admitted to Drug rehabilitation or Alcohol rehabilitation programs in California in 2006.
  • About 72% of all cases reported to poison centers for substance use were calls from people's homes.
  • Alcohol can stay in one's system from one to twelve hours.
  • The most commonly abused prescription drugs are pain medications, sleeping pills, anti-anxiety medications and stimulants (used to treat attention deficit/hyperactivity disorders).1
  • The majority of youths aged 12 to 17 do not perceive a great risk from smoking marijuana.
  • 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.
  • Use of illicit drugs or misuse of prescription drugs can make driving a car unsafejust like driving after drinking alcohol.
  • Crack cocaine, a crystallized form of cocaine, was developed during the cocaine boom of the 1970s and its use spread in the mid-1980s.

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