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Florida/FL/florida-city/alaska/florida Treatment Centers

in Florida/FL/florida-city/alaska/florida


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Drug Facts


  • People inject, snort, or smoke heroin. Some people mix heroin with crack cocaine, called a speedball.
  • Over 53 Million Opiate-based prescriptions are filled each year.
  • Increased or prolonged use of methamphetamine can cause sleeplessness, loss of appetite, increased blood pressure, paranoia, psychosis, aggression, disordered thinking, extreme mood swings and sometimes hallucinations.
  • Heroin is manufactured from opium poppies cultivated in four primary source areas: South America, Southeast and Southwest Asia, and Mexico.
  • Selling and sharing prescription drugs is not legal.
  • Some effects from of long-acting barbiturates can last up to two days.
  • Nitrous oxide is a medical gas that is referred to as "laughing gas" among users.
  • People who abuse anabolic steroids usually take them orally or inject them into the muscles.
  • 60% of High Schoolers, 32% of Middle Schoolers have seen drugs used, kept or sold on school grounds.
  • 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.
  • Oxycodone has the greatest potential for abuse and the greatest dangers.
  • The most commonly abused opioid painkillers include oxycodone, hydrocodone, meperidine, hydromorphone and propoxyphene.
  • Krododil users rarely live more than one year after taking it.
  • The 2013 World Drug Report reported that Afghanistan is the leading producer and cultivator of opium worldwide, manufacturing 74 percent of illicit opiates. Mexico, however, is the leading supplier to the United States.
  • In 2014, Mexican heroin accounted for 79 percent of the total weight of heroin analyzed under the HSP.
  • Each year Alcohol use results in nearly 2,000 college student's deaths.
  • Cocaine is sometimes taken with other drugs, including tranquilizers, amphetamines,2 marijuana and heroin.
  • The most powerful prescription painkillers are called opioids, which are opium-like compounds.
  • Ritalin and related 'hyperactivity' type drugs can be found almost anywhere.
  • The strongest risk for heroin addiction is addiction to opioid painkillers.

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