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Drug Facts


  • The younger you are, the more likely you are to become addicted to nicotine. If you're a teenager, your risk is especially high.
  • Ecstasy use has been 12 times more prevalent since it became known as club drug.
  • Mixing Ativan with depressants, such as alcohol, can lead to seizures, coma and death.
  • Mushrooms (Psilocybin) (AKA: Simple Simon, shrooms, silly putty, sherms, musk, boomers): psilocybin is the hallucinogenic chemical found in approximately 190 species of edible mushrooms.
  • People inject, snort, or smoke heroin. Some people mix heroin with crack cocaine, called a speedball.
  • Approximately, 57 percent of Steroid users have admitted to knowing that their lives could be shortened because of it.
  • 50% of adolescents mistakenly believe that prescription drugs are safer than illegal drugs.
  • 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.
  • Two of the most common long-term effects of heroin addiction are liver failure and heart disease.
  • Methadone accounts for nearly one third of opiate-associated deaths.
  • Drug use can interfere with the fetus' organ formation, which takes place during the first ten weeks of conception.
  • Hallucinogens (also known as 'psychedelics') can make a person see, hear, smell, feel or taste things that aren't really there or are different from how they are in reality.
  • Nearly 500,000 people each year abuse prescription medications for the first time.
  • Every day 2,000 teens in the United States try prescription drugs to get high for the first time
  • In Arizona during the year 2006 a total of 23,656 people were admitted to addiction treatment programs.
  • Between 2000 and 2006 the average number of alcohol related motor vehicle crashes in Utah resulting in death was approximately 59, resulting in an average of nearly 67 fatalities per year.
  • Over 23.5 million people need treatment for illegal drugs.
  • 6.8 million people with an addiction have a mental illness.
  • Two thirds of teens who abuse prescription pain relievers got them from family or friends, often without their knowledge, such as stealing them from the medicine cabinet.
  • There are approximately 5,000 LSD-related emergency room visits per year.

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