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Alcohol & Drug Detoxification in Connecticut/CT/orange/connecticut/category/spanish-drug-rehab/oregon/connecticut/CT/orange/connecticut


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Drug Facts


  • Approximately 28% of Utah adults 18-25 indicated binge drinking in the past months of 2006.
  • Family intervention has been found to be upwards of ninety percent successful and professionally conducted interventions have a success rate of near 98 percent.
  • Women who had an alcoholic parent are more likely to become an alcoholic than men who have an alcoholic parent.
  • Ecstasy speeds up heart rate and blood pressure and disrupts the brain's ability to regulate body temperature, which can result in overheating to the point of hyperthermia.
  • The drug was outlawed as a part of the U.S. Drug Abuse and Regulation Control Act of 1970.
  • Drug use can interfere with the fetus' organ formation, which takes place during the first ten weeks of conception.
  • Methadone came about during WW2 due to a shortage of morphine.
  • Today, teens are 10 times more likely to use Steroids than in 1991.
  • Ecstasy can cause kidney, liver and brain damage, including long-lasting lesions (injuries) on brain tissue.
  • In the past 15 years, abuse of prescription drugs, including powerful opioid painkillers such as oxycodone and hydrocodone, has risen alarmingly among all ages, growing fastest among college-age adults, who lead all age groups in the misuse of medications.
  • People inject, snort, or smoke heroin. Some people mix heroin with crack cocaine, called a speedball.
  • Barbiturate Overdose is known to result in Pneumonia, severe muscle damage, coma and death.
  • Over 550,000 high school students abuse anabolic steroids every year.
  • Paint thinner and glue can cause birth defects similar to that of alcohol.
  • Despite 20 years of scientific evidence showing that drug treatment programs do work, the feds fail to offer enough of them to prisoners.
  • Narcotics used illegally is the definition of drug abuse.
  • Meperidine (brand name Demerol) and hydromorphone (Dilaudid) come in tablets and propoxyphene (Darvon) in capsules, but all three have been known to be crushed and injected, snorted or smoked.
  • Alcohol-impaired driving fatalities accounted for 9,967 deaths (31 percent of overall driving fatalities).
  • 12-17 year olds abuse prescription drugs more than ecstasy, heroin, crack/cocaine and methamphetamines combined.1

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