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Drug Facts


  • Crack comes in solid blocks or crystals varying in color from yellow to pale rose or white.
  • In Hamilton County, 7,300 people were served by street outreach, emergency shelter and transitional housing programs in 2007, according to the Cincinnati/Hamilton County Continuum of Care for the Homeless.
  • 193,717 people were admitted to Drug rehabilitation or Alcohol rehabilitation programs in California in 2006.
  • Heroin was first manufactured in 1898 by the Bayer pharmaceutical company of Germany and marketed as a treatment for tuberculosis as well as a remedy for morphine addiction.
  • Relapse is the return to drug use after an attempt to stop. Relapse indicates the need for more or different treatment.
  • After time, a heroin user's sense of smell and taste become numb and may disappear.
  • Ritalin and related 'hyperactivity' type drugs can be found almost anywhere.
  • In the 20th Century Barbiturates were Prescribed as sedatives, anesthetics, anxiolytics, and anti-convulsants
  • In the 1950s, methamphetamine was prescribed as a diet aid and to fight depression.
  • Coca is one of the oldest, most potent and most dangerous stimulants of natural origin.
  • A person can overdose on heroin. Naloxone is a medicine that can treat a heroin overdose when given right away.
  • When injected, it can cause decay of muscle tissues and closure of blood vessels.
  • Alcohol-Impaired-Driving Fatality: A fatality in a crash involving a driver or motorcycle rider (operator) with a BAC of 0.08 g/dL or greater.
  • Meth users often have bad teeth from poor oral hygiene, dry mouth as meth can crack and deteriorate teeth.
  • Amphetamines are stimulant drugs, which means they speed up the messages travelling between the brain and the body.
  • 18 percent of drivers killed in a crash tested positive for at least one drug.
  • A biochemical abnormality in the liver forms in 80 percent of Steroid users.
  • An estimated 88,0009 people (approximately 62,000 men and 26,000 women9) die from alcohol-related causes annually, making alcohol the fourth leading preventable cause of death in the United States.
  • Slang Terms for Heroin:Smack, Dope, Junk, Mud, Skag, Brown Sugar, Brown, 'H', Big H, Horse, Charley, China White, Boy, Harry, Mr. Brownstone, Dr. Feelgood
  • 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.

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