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Drug Facts


  • Opiate-based abuse causes over 17,000 deaths annually.
  • Approximately 122,000 people have admitted to using PCP in the past year.
  • In 1981, Alprazolam released to the United States drug market.
  • Nicotine is just as addictive as heroin, cocaine or alcohol. That's why it's so easy to get hooked.
  • Ecstasy is emotionally damaging and users often suffer depression, confusion, severe anxiety, paranoia, psychotic behavior and other psychological problems.
  • Nearly 50% of all emergency room admissions from poisonings are attributed to drug abuse or misuse.
  • In 2013, that number increased to 3.5 million children on stimulants.
  • Methadone was created by chemists in Germany in WWII.
  • 1 in 10 high school students has reported abusing barbiturates
  • 54% of high school seniors do not think regular steroid use is harmful, the lowest number since 1980, when the National Institute on Drug Abuse started asking about perception on steroids.
  • Cocaine is also the most common drug found in addition to alcohol in alcohol-related emergency room visits.
  • Non-pharmaceutical fentanyl is sold in the following forms: as a powder; spiked on blotter paper; mixed with or substituted for heroin; or as tablets that mimic other, less potent opioids.
  • More than 10 percent of U.S. children live with a parent with alcohol problems.
  • Heroin is a highly addictive drug and the most rapidly acting of the opiates. Heroin is also known as Big H, Black Tar, Chiva, Hell Dust, Horse, Negra, Smack,Thunder
  • There were approximately 160,000 amphetamine and methamphetamine related emergency room visits in 2011.
  • 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.
  • Smokers who continuously smoke will always have nicotine in their system.
  • In the 1950s, methamphetamine was prescribed as a diet aid and to fight depression.
  • Street amphetamine: bennies, black beauties, copilots, eye-openers, lid poppers, pep pills, speed, uppers, wake-ups, and white crosses28
  • In the early 1900s snorting Cocaine was popular, until the drug was banned by the Harrison Act in 1914.

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