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Drug Facts


  • Most people who take heroin will become addicted within 12 weeks of consistent use.
  • 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.
  • There were approximately 160,000 amphetamine and methamphetamine related emergency room visits in 2011.
  • Crystal Meth is commonly known as glass or ice.
  • The strongest risk for heroin addiction is addiction to opioid painkillers.
  • Crack Cocaine is categorized next to PCP and Meth as an illegal Schedule II drug.
  • Rohypnol (The Date Rape Drug) is more commonly known as "roofies".
  • Over 200,000 people have abused Ketamine within the past year.
  • Over 5 million emergency room visits in 2011 were drug related.
  • Barbiturates have been used for depression and even by vets for animal anesthesia yet people take them in order to relax and for insomnia.
  • Flashbacks can occur in people who have abused hallucinogens even months after they stop taking them.
  • Each year Alcohol use results in nearly 2,000 college student's deaths.
  • Opiate-based drug abuse contributes to over 17,000 deaths each year.
  • 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.
  • The U.N. suspects that over 9 million people actively use ecstasy worldwide.
  • When taken, meth and crystal meth create a false sense of well-being and energy, and so a person will tend to push his body faster and further than it is meant to go.
  • Prescription painkillers are powerful drugs that interfere with the nervous system's transmission of the nerve signals we perceive as pain.
  • Prescription opioid pain medicines such as OxyContin and Vicodin have effects similar to heroin.
  • Steroids can stop growth prematurely and permanently in teenagers who take them.
  • A heroin overdose causes slow and shallow breathing, blue lips and fingernails, clammy skin, convulsions, coma, and can be fatal.

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