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Drug Facts


  • Emergency room admissions from prescription drug abuse have risen by over 130% over the last five years.
  • Hallucinogens (also known as 'psychedelics') can make a person see, hear, smell, feel or taste things that aren't really there or are different from how they are in reality.
  • Nearly 170,000 people try heroin for the first time every year. That number is steadily increasing.
  • Substance abuse and addiction also affects other areas, such as broken families, destroyed careers, death due to negligence or accident, domestic violence, physical abuse, and child abuse.
  • In 2008, the Thurston County Narcotics Task Force seized about 700 Oxycontin tablets that had been diverted for illegal use, said task force commander Lt. Lorelei Thompson.
  • Adderall is popular on college campuses, with black markets popping up to supply the demand of students.
  • Ambien is a sedative-hypnotic known to cause hallucinations, suicidal thoughts and death.
  • Smoking crack allows it to reach the brain more quickly and thus brings an intense and immediatebut very short-livedhigh that lasts about fifteen minutes.
  • Two thirds of teens who abuse prescription pain relievers got them from family or friends, often without their knowledge, such as stealing them from the medicine cabinet.
  • 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.
  • Approximately 500,000 individuals annually abuse prescription medications for their first time.
  • Predatory drugs metabolize quickly so that they are not in the system when the victim is medically examined.
  • Cocaine hydrochloride is most commonly snorted. It can also be injected, rubbed into the gums, added to drinks or food.
  • The effects of heroin can last three to four hours.
  • Marijuana had the highest rates of dependence out of all illicit substances in 2011.
  • Heroin is a highly addictive, illegal drug.
  • Cocaine is one of the most dangerous drugs known to man.
  • 37% of individuals claim that the United States is losing ground in the war on prescription drug abuse.
  • Long-term use of painkillers can lead to dependence, even for people who are prescribed them to relieve a medical condition but eventually fall into the trap of abuse and addiction.
  • 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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