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in Pennsylvania/category/pennsylvania/category/drug-rehab-for-criminal-justice-clients/pennsylvania/category/pennsylvania


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Drug Facts


  • Crack is heated and smoked. It is so named because it makes a cracking or popping sound when heated.
  • Alcohol affects the central nervous system, thereby controlling all bodily functions.
  • Authority obtains over 10,500 accounts of clonazepam abuse annually.
  • Mixing Ativan with depressants, such as alcohol, can lead to seizures, coma and death.
  • 30% of emergency room admissions from prescription abuse involve opiate-based substances.
  • The number of people receiving treatment for addiction to painkillers and sedatives has doubled since 2002.
  • Heroin use has increased across the US among men and women, most age groups, and all income levels.
  • Crack cocaine earned the nickname crack because of the cracking sound it makes when it is heated.
  • Other names of Cocaine include C, coke, nose candy, snow, white lady, toot, Charlie, blow, white dust or stardust.
  • Mushrooms (Psilocybin) (AKA: Simple Simon, shrooms, silly putty, sherms, musk, boomers): psilocybin is the hallucinogenic chemical found in approximately 190 species of edible mushrooms.
  • More than 10 percent of U.S. children live with a parent with alcohol problems.
  • Methamphetamine is taken orally, smoked, snorted, or dissolved in water or alcohol and injected.
  • Nearly 170,000 people try heroin for the first time every year. That number is steadily increasing.
  • Foreign producers now supply much of the U.S. Methamphetamine market, and attempts to bring that production under control have been problematic.
  • Deaths from Alcohol poisoning are most common among the ages 35-64.
  • Methadone came about during WW2 due to a shortage of morphine.
  • Currently 7.1 million adults, over 2 percent of the population in the U.S. are locked up or on probation; about half of those suffer from some kind of addiction to heroin, alcohol, crack, crystal meth, or some other drug but only 20 percent of those addicts actually get effective treatment as a result of their involvement with the judicial system.
  • From 2011 to 2016, bath salt use has declined by almost 92%.
  • Peyote is approximately 4000 times less potent than LSD.
  • A tweaker can appear normal - eyes clear, speech concise, and movements brisk; however, a closer look will reveal that the person's eyes are moving ten times faster than normal, the voice has a slight quiver, and movements are quick and jerky.

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