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Massachusetts/category/self-payment-drug-rehab/massachusetts Treatment Centers

Mental health services in Massachusetts/category/self-payment-drug-rehab/massachusetts


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Rehabilitation Categories


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Drug Facts


  • Hallucinogen rates have risen by over 30% over the past twenty years.
  • Effective drug abuse treatment engages participants in a therapeutic process, retains them in treatment for a suitable length of time, and helps them to maintain abstinence over time.
  • Methadone generally stays in the system longer than heroin up to 59 hours, according to the FDA, compared to heroin's 4 6 hours.
  • Crack users may experience severe respiratory problems, including coughing, shortness of breath, lung damage and bleeding.
  • 60% of High Schoolers, 32% of Middle Schoolers have seen drugs used, kept or sold on school grounds.
  • Of the 500 metric tons of methamphetamine produced, only 4 tons is legally produced for legal medical use.
  • Oxycodone is usually swallowed but is sometimes injected or used as a suppository.
  • Today, heroin is known to be a more potent and faster acting painkiller than morphine because it passes more readily from the bloodstream into the brain.
  • Most people try heroin for the first time in their late teens or early 20s. Anyone can become addictedall races, genders, and ethnicities.
  • Benzodiazepines are depressants that act as hypnotics in large doses, anxiolytics in moderate dosages and sedatives in low doses.
  • Women in bars can suffer from sexually aggressive acts if they are drinking heavily.
  • Stimulants are found in every day household items such as tobacco, nicotine and daytime cough medicine.
  • Cocaine can be snorted, injected, sniffed or smoked.
  • Every day 2,000 teens in the United States try prescription drugs to get high for the first time
  • 75% of most designer drugs are consumed by adolescents and younger adults.
  • 45% of people who use heroin were also addicted to prescription opioid painkillers.
  • Drug abuse and addiction is a chronic, relapsing, compulsive disease that often requires formal treatment, and may call for multiple courses of treatment.
  • Synthetic drug stimulants, also known as cathinones, mimic the effects of ecstasy or MDMA. Bath salts and Molly are examples of synthetic cathinones.
  • In 2013, that number increased to 3.5 million children on stimulants.
  • In Hamilton County, 7,300 people were served by street outreach, emergency shelter and transitional housing programs in 2007, according to the Cincinnati/Hamilton County Continuum of Care for the Homeless.

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