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Massachusetts/category/drug-rehab-for-pregnant-women/massachusetts Treatment Centers

in Massachusetts/category/drug-rehab-for-pregnant-women/massachusetts


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Drug Facts


  • Disability-Adjusted Life-Years (DALYs): A measure of years of life lost or lived in less than full health.
  • Rohypnol causes a person to black out or forget what happened to them.
  • Crack causes a short-lived, intense high that is immediately followed by the oppositeintense depression, edginess and a craving for more of the drug.
  • Cocaine use can lead to death from respiratory (breathing) failure, stroke, cerebral hemorrhage (bleeding in the brain) or heart attack.
  • Painkillers are among the most commonly abused prescription drugs.
  • Oxycodone stays in the system 1-10 days.
  • By the 8th grade, 28% of adolescents have consumed alcohol, 15% have smoked cigarettes, and 16.5% have used marijuana.
  • Over 2.3 million people admitted to have abused Ketamine.
  • 30% of emergency room admissions from prescription abuse involve opiate-based substances.
  • Women abuse alcohol and drugs for different reasons than men do.
  • Heroin usemore than doubledamong young adults ages 1825 in the past decade.
  • 30,000 people may depend on over the counter drugs containing codeine, with middle-aged women most at risk, showing that "addiction to over-the-counter painkillers is becoming a serious problem.
  • Approximately 28% of Utah adults 18-25 indicated binge drinking in the past months of 2006.
  • In the 1950s, methamphetamine was prescribed as a diet aid and to fight depression.
  • During the 2000's many older drugs were reapproved for new use in depression treatment.
  • In 1898 a German chemical company launched a new medicine called Heroin'
  • In 2003 a total of 4,006 people were admitted to Alaska Drug rehabilitation or Alcohol rehabilitation programs.
  • After marijuana and alcohol, the most common drugs teens are misuing or abusing are prescription medications.3
  • Oxycontin is know on the street as the hillbilly heroin.
  • An estimated 88,0009 people (approximately 62,000 men and 26,000 women9) die from alcohol-related causes annually, making alcohol the fourth leading preventable cause of death in the United States.

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