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Drug Facts


  • In 2014, over 913,000 people were reported to be addicted to cocaine.
  • Amphetamines are generally swallowed, injected or smoked. They are also snorted.
  • Cocaine only has an effect on a person for about an hour, which will lead a person to have to use cocaine many times through out the day.
  • Steroids damage hormones, causing guys to grow breasts and girls to grow beards and facial hair.
  • Heroin stays in a person's system 1-10 days.
  • 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.
  • Over 600,000 people has been reported to have used ecstasy within the last month.
  • Anorectic drugs can cause heart problems leading to cardiac arrest in young people.
  • Ketamine is used by medical practitioners and veterinarians as an anaesthetic. It is sometimes used illegally by people to get 'high'.
  • People who abuse anabolic steroids usually take them orally or inject them into the muscles.
  • Ironically, young teens in small towns are more likely to use crystal meth than teens raised in the city.
  • Alcoholism has been found to be genetically inherited in some families.
  • Family intervention has been found to be upwards of ninety percent successful and professionally conducted interventions have a success rate of near 98 percent.
  • Hallucinogens also cause physical changes such as increased heart rate, elevating blood pressure and dilating pupils.
  • After time, a heroin user's sense of smell and taste become numb and may disappear.
  • Crack cocaine, a crystallized form of cocaine, was developed during the cocaine boom of the 1970s and its use spread in the mid-1980s.
  • 3 Million individuals in the U.S. have been prescribed medications like buprenorphine to treat addiction to opiates.
  • Alcohol blocks messages trying to get to the brain, altering a person's vision, perception, movements, emotions and hearing.
  • Methamphetamine is a white crystalline drug that people take by snorting it (inhaling through the nose), smoking it or injecting it with a needle.
  • In the 20th Century Barbiturates were Prescribed as sedatives, anesthetics, anxiolytics, and anti-convulsants

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