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Drug rehabilitation for DUI & DWI offenders in Pennsylvania/category/massachusetts/georgia/pennsylvania


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Drug Facts


  • More than9 in 10people who used heroin also used at least one other drug.
  • Using Crack Cocaine, even once, can result in life altering addiction.
  • Brain changes that occur over time with drug use challenge an addicted person's self-control and interfere with their ability to resist intense urges to take drugs.
  • Emergency room admissions from prescription opiate abuse have risen by over 180% over the last five years.
  • Ecstasy can cause you to drink too much water when not needed, which upsets the salt balance in your body.
  • Methamphetamine is taken orally, smoked, snorted, or dissolved in water or alcohol and injected.
  • Ketamine is popular at dance clubs and "raves", unfortunately, some people (usually female) are not aware they have been dosed.
  • 1.3% of high school seniors have tired bath salts.
  • Hydrocodone is used in combination with other chemicals and is available in prescription pain medications as tablets, capsules and syrups.
  • Today, heroin is known to be a more potent and faster acting painkiller than morphine because it passes more readily from the bloodstream into the brain.
  • Prolonged use of cocaine can cause ulcers in the nostrils.
  • Mescaline (AKA: Cactus, cactus buttons, cactus joint, mesc, mescal, mese, mezc, moon, musk, topi): occurs naturally in certain types of cactus plants, including the peyote cactus.
  • Out of every 100 people who try, only between 5 and 10 will actually be able to stop smoking on their own.
  • Adderall on the streets is known as: Addies, Study Drugs, the Smart Drug.
  • 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.
  • Methamphetamine is an illegal drug in the same class as cocaine and other powerful street drugs.
  • Methadone came about during WW2 due to a shortage of morphine.
  • Gang affiliation and drugs go hand in hand.
  • 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.
  • After marijuana and alcohol, the most common drugs teens are misuing or abusing are prescription medications.3

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