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Drug Facts


  • Substance abuse and addiction also affects other areas, such as broken families, destroyed careers, death due to negligence or accident, domestic violence, physical abuse, and child abuse.
  • In 2012, over 16 million adults were prescribed Adderall.
  • 2.5 million emergency department visits are attributed to drug misuse or overdose.
  • Ecstasy use has been 12 times more prevalent since it became known as club drug.
  • 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.
  • Today, teens are 10 times more likely to use Steroids than in 1991.
  • A heroin overdose causes slow and shallow breathing, blue lips and fingernails, clammy skin, convulsions, coma, and can be fatal.
  • Ambien is a sedative-hypnotic known to cause hallucinations, suicidal thoughts and death.
  • The largest amount of illicit drug-related emergency room visits in 2011 were cocaine related (over 500,000 visits).
  • Benzodiazepines are usually swallowed. Some people also inject and snort them.
  • Heroin (like opium and morphine) is made from the resin of poppy plants.
  • Alcohol kills more young people than all other drugs combined.
  • 18 percent of drivers killed in a crash tested positive for at least one drug.
  • Amphetamine was first made in 1887 in Germany and methamphetamine, more potent and easy to make, was developed in Japan in 1919.
  • Adderall was brought to the prescription drug market as a new way to treat A.D.H.D in 1996, slowly replacing Ritalin.
  • Crack Cocaine was first developed during the cocaine boom of the 1970's.
  • 90% of people are exposed to illegal substance before the age of 18.
  • Heroin use has increased across the US among men and women, most age groups, and all income levels.
  • Two-thirds of people 12 and older (68%) who have abused prescription pain relievers within the past year say they got them from a friend or relative.1
  • In 1929, chemist Gordon Alles was looking for a treatment for asthma and tested the chemical now known as Amphetamine, a main component of Adderall, on himself.

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