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Pennsylvania/category/pennsylvania/category/private-drug-rehab-insurance/js/pennsylvania/category/pennsylvania Treatment Centers

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Drug Facts


  • Rohypnol has no odor or taste so it can be put into someone's drink without being detected, which has lead to it being called the "Date Rape Drug".
  • The euphoric feeling of cocaine is then followed by a crash filled with depression and paranoia.
  • More teens die from prescription drugs than heroin/cocaine combined.
  • Meth use in the United States varies geographically, with the highest rate of use in the West and the lowest in the Northeast.
  • The most dangerous stage of methamphetamine abuse occurs when an abuser has not slept in 3-15 days and is irritable and paranoid. This behavior is referred to as 'tweaking,' and the user is known as the 'tweaker'.
  • Drug use can hamper the prenatal growth of the fetus, which occurs after the organ formation.
  • 12 to 17 year olds abuse prescription drugs more than they abuse ecstasy, crack/cocaine, heroin, and methamphetamine combined.
  • Heroin is a 'downer,' which means it's a depressant that slows messages traveling between the brain and body.
  • There is inpatient treatment and outpatient.
  • 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.
  • Alcohol-impaired driving fatalities accounted for 9,967 deaths (31 percent of overall driving fatalities).
  • In 1904, Barbiturates were introduced for further medicinal purposes
  • The Use of Methamphetamine surged in the 1950's and 1960's, when users began injecting more frequently.
  • The strongest risk for heroin addiction is addiction to opioid painkillers.
  • 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.
  • Heroin can be injected, smoked or snorted
  • 64% of teens say they have used prescription pain killers that they got from a friend or family member.
  • The drug Diazepam has over 500 different brand-names worldwide.
  • Other names of Cocaine include C, coke, nose candy, snow, white lady, toot, Charlie, blow, white dust or stardust.
  • A syringe of morphine was, in a very real sense, a magic wand,' states David Courtwright in Dark Paradise. '

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