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Drug Facts


  • More than 1,600 teens begin abusing prescription drugs each day.1
  • Most people try heroin for the first time in their late teens or early 20s. Anyone can become addictedall races, genders, and ethnicities.
  • By June 2011, the PCC had received over 3,470 calls about Bath Salts.
  • National Survey on Drug Use and Health reported 153,000 current heroin users in the US.
  • Ecstasy increases levels of several chemicals in the brain, including serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine. It alters your mood and makes you feel closer and more connected to others.
  • Dilaudid is 8 times more potent than morphine.
  • Methamphetamine has many nicknamesmeth, crank, chalk or speed being the most common.
  • In 2014, Mexican heroin accounted for 79 percent of the total weight of heroin analyzed under the HSP.
  • In the United States, deaths from pain medication abuse are outnumbering deaths from traffic accidents in young adults.
  • In Connecticut overdoses have claimed at least eight lives of high school and college-age students in communities large and small in 2008.
  • Methadone was created by chemists in Germany in WWII.
  • Rates of illicit drug use is highest among those aged 18 to 25.
  • Babies can be born addicted to drugs.
  • According to some studies done by two Harvard psychiatrists, Dr. Harrison Pope and Kurt Brower, long term Steroid abuse can mimic symptoms of Bipolar Disorder.
  • 90% of people are exposed to illegal substance before the age of 18.
  • The act in 1914 prohibited the import of coca leaves and Cocaine, except for pharmaceutical purposes.
  • Heroin is a highly addictive, illegal drug.
  • Barbiturates are a class B drug, meaning that any use outside of a prescription is met with prison time and a fine.
  • In 1929, chemist Gordon Alles was looking for a treatment for asthma and tested the chemical now known as Amphetamine, a main component of Adderall, on himself.
  • Ambien, the commonly prescribed sleep aid, is also known as Zolpidem.

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