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Pennsylvania/category/pennsylvania Treatment Centers

in Pennsylvania/category/pennsylvania


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Drug Facts


  • Abused by an estimated one in five teens, prescription drugs are second only to alcohol and marijuana as the substances they use to get high.
  • Women who have an abortion are more prone to turn to alcohol or drug abuse afterward.
  • Over 60% of deaths from drug overdoses are accredited to prescription drugs.
  • The drug Diazepam has over 500 different brand-names worldwide.
  • In 2009, a Wisconsin man sleepwalked outside and froze to death after taking Ambien.
  • Women who had an alcoholic parent are more likely to become an alcoholic than men who have an alcoholic parent.
  • Crack Cocaine use became enormously popular in the mid-1980's, particularly in urban areas.
  • LSD (or its full name: lysergic acid diethylamide) is a potent hallucinogen that dramatically alters your thoughts and your perception of reality.
  • 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
  • Cocaine is a stimulant drug, which means that it speeds up the messages travelling between the brain and the rest of the body.
  • While the use of many street drugs is on a slight decline in the US, abuse of prescription drugs is growing.
  • Alcoholism has been found to be genetically inherited in some families.
  • Crack cocaine was introduced into society in 1985.
  • Roughly 20 percent of college students meet the criteria for an AUD.29
  • Cocaine use can lead to death from respiratory (breathing) failure, stroke, cerebral hemorrhage (bleeding in the brain) or heart attack.
  • In 2014, over 913,000 people were reported to be addicted to cocaine.
  • In 1906, Coca Cola removed Cocaine from the Coca leaves used to make its product.
  • Benzodiazepines are depressants that act as hypnotics in large doses, anxiolytics in moderate dosages and sedatives in low doses.
  • 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.
  • Teens who start with alcohol are more likely to try cocaine than teens who do not drink.

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