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ASL & or hearing impaired assistance in Tennessee/category/drug-rehab-with-residential-beds-for-children/kansas/tennessee


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Drug Facts


  • Over 60% of teens report that drugs of some kind are kept, sold, and used at their school.
  • 6.5% of high school seniors smoke pot daily, up from 5.1% five years ago. Meanwhile, less than 20% of 12th graders think occasional use is harmful, while less than 40% see regular use as harmful (lowest numbers since 1983).
  • Alcohol can stay in one's system from one to twelve hours.
  • Between 2002 and 2006, over a half million of teens aged 12 to 17 had used inhalants.
  • 3 Million individuals in the U.S. have been prescribed medications like buprenorphine to treat addiction to opiates.
  • Snorting drugs can create loss of sense of smell, nosebleeds, frequent runny nose, and problems with swallowing.
  • Adderall is a Schedule II controlled substance, meaning that it has a high potential for addiction.
  • Barbiturates have been used for depression and even by vets for animal anesthesia yet people take them in order to relax and for insomnia.
  • Over 53 Million Opiate-based prescriptions are filled each year.
  • These days, taking pills is acceptable: there is the feeling that there is a "pill for everything".
  • Heroin can be smoked using a method called 'chasing the dragon.'
  • Ritalin comes in small pills, about the size and shape of aspirin tablets, with the word 'Ciba' (the manufacturer's name) stamped on it.
  • Nearly 50% of all emergency room admissions from poisonings are attributed to drug abuse or misuse.
  • Amphetamines are generally swallowed, injected or smoked. They are also snorted.
  • Hallucinogens are drugs used to alter the perception and function of the mind.
  • Methadone was created by chemists in Germany in WWII.
  • Stimulants like Khat cause up to 170,000 emergency room admissions each year.
  • 30% of emergency room admissions from prescription abuse involve opiate-based substances.
  • Cocaine comes in two forms. One is a powder and the other is a rock. The rock form of cocaine is referred to as crack cocaine.
  • Medical consequences of chronic heroin injection abuse include scarred and/or collapsed veins, bacterial infections of the blood vessels and heart valves, abscesses (boils) and other soft-tissue infections, and liver or kidney disease.

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