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Texas/category/2.1/texas Treatment Centers

Drug rehab for persons with HIV or AIDS in Texas/category/2.1/texas


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Drug Facts


  • 3 Million individuals in the U.S. have been prescribed medications like buprenorphine to treat addiction to opiates.
  • 28% of teens know at least 1 person who has tried ecstasy.
  • Alcohol blocks messages trying to get to the brain, altering a person's vision, perception, movements, emotions and hearing.
  • Meth creates an immediate high that quickly fades. As a result, users often take it repeatedly, making it extremely addictive.
  • Heroin can be injected, smoked or snorted
  • Cocaine is a stimulant that has been utilized and abused for ages.
  • PCP (also known as angel dust) can cause drug addiction in the infant as well as tremors.
  • Bath Salts attributed to approximately 22,000 ER visits in 2011.
  • Fewer than one out of ten North Carolinian's who use illegal drugs, and only one of 20 with alcohol problems, get state funded help, and the treatment they do receive is out of date and inadequate.
  • 77% of college students who abuse steroids also abuse at least one other substance.
  • Soon following its introduction, Cocaine became a common household drug.
  • Opiate-based drugs have risen by over 80% in less than four years.
  • Getting blackout drunk doesn't actually make you forget: the brain temporarily loses the ability to make memories.
  • Synthetic drug stimulants, also known as cathinones, mimic the effects of ecstasy or MDMA. Bath salts and Molly are examples of synthetic cathinones.
  • A study by UCLA revealed that methamphetamines release nearly 4 times as much dopamine as cocaine, which means the substance is much more addictive.
  • Adderall was brought to the prescription drug market as a new way to treat A.D.H.D in 1996, slowly replacing Ritalin.
  • When abused orally, side effects can include slurred speech, seizures, delirium and vertigo.
  • High dosages of ketamine can lead to the feeling of an out of body experience or even death.
  • An estimated 20 percent of U.S. college students are afflicted with Alcoholism.
  • A heroin overdose causes slow and shallow breathing, blue lips and fingernails, clammy skin, convulsions, coma, and can be fatal.

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