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in Pennsylvania/category/michigan/utah/pennsylvania


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Drug Facts


  • Emergency room admissions from prescription opiate abuse have risen by over 180% over the last five years.
  • Heroin can be injected, smoked or snorted
  • The effects of ecstasy are usually felt about 20 minutes to an hour after it's taken and last for around 6 hours.
  • Opioid painkillers produce a short-lived euphoria, but they are also addictive.
  • Bath salts contain man-made stimulants called cathinone's, which are like amphetamines.
  • 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.
  • Crystal Meth is commonly known as glass or ice.
  • Alcohol is the most likely substance for someone to become addicted to in America.
  • 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.
  • 12 to 17 year olds abuse prescription drugs more than they abuse ecstasy, crack/cocaine, heroin, and methamphetamine combined.
  • Heroin addiction was blamed for a number of the 260 murders that occurred in 1922 in New York (which compared with seventeen in London). These concerns led the US Congress to ban all domestic manufacture of heroin in 1924.
  • Crystal Meth is the world's second most popular illicit drug.
  • The majority of youths aged 12 to 17 do not perceive a great risk from smoking marijuana.
  • Attempts were made to use heroin in place of morphine due to problems of morphine abuse.
  • Family intervention has been found to be upwards of ninety percent successful and professionally conducted interventions have a success rate of near 98 percent.
  • There are 2,200 alcohol poisoning deaths in the US each year.
  • In 1929, chemist Gordon Alles was looking for a treatment for asthma and tested the chemical now known as Amphetamine, a main component of Adderall, on himself.
  • Ambien, the commonly prescribed sleep aid, is also known as Zolpidem.
  • Ritalin is the common name for methylphenidate, classified by the Drug Enforcement Administration as a Schedule II narcoticthe same classification as cocaine, morphine and amphetamines.
  • Women abuse alcohol and drugs for different reasons than men do.

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