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General health services in Tennessee/category/residential-short-term-drug-treatment/arizona/tennessee


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Drug Facts


  • Emergency room admissions from prescription drug abuse have risen by over 130% over the last five years.
  • Cocaine can be snorted, injected, sniffed or smoked.
  • Approximately 28% of Utah adults 18-25 indicated binge drinking in the past months of 2006.
  • In 2009, a Wisconsin man sleepwalked outside and froze to death after taking Ambien.
  • Those who have become addicted to heroin and stop using the drug abruptly may have severe withdrawal.
  • An estimated 20 percent of U.S. college students are afflicted with Alcoholism.
  • Steroids can cause disfiguring ailments such as baldness in girls and severe acne in all who use them.
  • The intense high a heroin user seeks lasts only a few minutes.
  • The drug was outlawed as a part of the U.S. Drug Abuse and Regulation Control Act of 1970.
  • The biggest abusers of prescription drugs aged 18-25.
  • 10 million people aged 12 or older reported driving under the influence of illicit drugs.
  • Stimulant drugs, such as Adderall, are the second most abused drug on college campuses, next to Marijuana.
  • K2 and Spice are synthetic marijuana compounds, also known as cannabinoids.
  • Nearly 6,700 people each day abused a psychotropic medication for the first time.
  • Benzodiazepines are depressants that act as hypnotics in large doses, anxiolytics in moderate dosages and sedatives in low doses.
  • These days, taking pills is acceptable: there is the feeling that there is a "pill for everything".
  • 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
  • The number of habitual cocaine users has declined by 75% since 1986, but it's still a popular drug for many people.
  • Two thirds of the people who abuse drugs or alcohol admit to being sexually molested when they were children.
  • In Connecticut overdoses have claimed at least eight lives of high school and college-age students in communities large and small in 2008.

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