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Drug Facts


  • Cocaine is the second most trafficked illegal drug in the world.
  • Narcotics are sometimes necessary to treat both psychological and physical ailments but the use of any narcotic can become habitual or a dependency.
  • About 1 in 4 college students report academic consequences from drinking, including missing class, falling behind in class, doing poorly on exams or papers, and receiving lower grades overall.30
  • Deaths from Alcohol poisoning are most common among the ages 35-64.
  • Approximately 65% of adolescents say that home medicine cabinets are the main source of drugs.
  • Long-term use of painkillers can lead to dependence, even for people who are prescribed them to relieve a medical condition but eventually fall into the trap of abuse and addiction.
  • Over 1 million people have tried hallucinogens for the fist time this year.
  • The high potency of fentanyl greatly increases risk of overdose.
  • Oxycodone is as powerful as heroin and affects the nervous system the same way.
  • Tweaking makes achieving the original high difficult, causing frustration and unstable behavior in the user.
  • The U.S. poisoned industrial Alcohols made in the country, killing a whopping 10,000 people in the process.
  • The largest amount of illicit drug-related emergency room visits in 2011 were cocaine related (over 500,000 visits).
  • Cocaine use can cause the placenta to separate from the uterus, causing internal bleeding.
  • Synthetic drugs, also referred to as designer or club drugs, are chemically-created in a lab to mimic another drug such as marijuana, cocaine or morphine.
  • Cocaine first appeared in American society in the 1880s.
  • Depressants are widely used to relieve stress, induce sleep and relieve anxiety.
  • A person can overdose on heroin. Naloxone is a medicine that can treat a heroin overdose when given right away.
  • 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.
  • Emergency room admissions from prescription opiate abuse have risen by over 180% over the last five years.
  • Drug addiction and abuse costs the American taxpayers an average of $484 billion each year.

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