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in Pennsylvania/category/pennsylvania


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Drug Facts


  • 6.5% of high school seniors smoke pot daily, up from 5.1% five years ago. Meanwhile, less than 20% of 12th graders think occasional use is harmful, while less than 40% see regular use as harmful (lowest numbers since 1983).
  • Women are at a higher risk than men for liver damage, brain damage and heart damage due to alcohol intake.
  • Women in bars can suffer from sexually aggressive acts if they are drinking heavily.
  • Most people use drugs for the first time when they are teenagers.
  • A person can become more tolerant to heroin so, after a short time, more and more heroin is needed to produce the same level of intensity.
  • Codeine taken with alcohol can cause mental clouding, reduced coordination and slow breathing.
  • Girls seem to become addicted to nicotine faster than boys do.
  • Most people who take heroin will become addicted within 12 weeks of consistent use.
  • The Canadian government reports that 90% of their mescaline is a combination of PCP and LSD
  • Cocaine restricts blood flow to the brain, increases heart rate, and promotes blood clotting. These effects can lead to stroke or heart attack.
  • In 2010, 42,274 emergency rooms visits were due to Ambien.
  • Over 60 Million are said to have prescription for sedatives.
  • The most commonly abused prescription drugs are pain medications, sleeping pills, anti-anxiety medications and stimulants (used to treat attention deficit/hyperactivity disorders).1
  • In 2003 a total of 4,006 people were admitted to Alaska Drug rehabilitation or Alcohol rehabilitation programs.
  • Inhalants go through the lungs and into the bloodstream, and are quickly distributed to the brain and other organs in the body.
  • When a pregnant woman takes drugs, her unborn child is taking them, too.
  • 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.
  • According to some studies done by two Harvard psychiatrists, Dr. Harrison Pope and Kurt Brower, long term Steroid abuse can mimic symptoms of Bipolar Disorder.
  • Bath salts contain man-made stimulants called cathinone's, which are like amphetamines.
  • Barbiturates have been use in the past to treat a variety of symptoms from insomnia and dementia to neonatal jaundice

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