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Washington/category/outpatient-drug-rehab-centers/washington Treatment Centers

in Washington/category/outpatient-drug-rehab-centers/washington


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Drug Facts


  • Each year Alcohol use results in nearly 2,000 college student's deaths.
  • Cocaine causes a short-lived, intense high that is immediately followed by the oppositeintense depression, edginess and a craving for more of the drug.
  • Girls seem to become addicted to nicotine faster than boys do.
  • Women who abuse drugs are more prone to sexually transmitted diseases and mental health problems such as depression.
  • In 2014, over 354,000 U.S. citizens were daily users of Crack.
  • Ecstasy can cause you to dehydrate.
  • Women are at a higher risk than men for liver damage, brain damage and heart damage due to alcohol intake.
  • There are approximately 5,000 LSD-related emergency room visits per year.
  • Roughly 20 percent of college students meet the criteria for an AUD.29
  • Almost 38 million people have admitted to have used cocaine in their lifetime.
  • 90% of Americans with a substance abuse problem started smoking marijuana, drinking or using other drugs before age 18.
  • Anorectic drugs have increased in order to suppress appetites, especially among teenage girls and models.
  • Mushrooms (Psilocybin) (AKA: Simple Simon, shrooms, silly putty, sherms, musk, boomers): psilocybin is the hallucinogenic chemical found in approximately 190 species of edible mushrooms.
  • Flashbacks can occur in people who have abused hallucinogens even months after they stop taking them.
  • MDMA is known on the streets as: Molly, ecstasy, XTC, X, E, Adam, Eve, clarity, hug, beans, love drug, lovers' speed, peace, uppers.
  • The most commonly abused opioid painkillers include oxycodone, hydrocodone, meperidine, hydromorphone and propoxyphene.
  • Attempts were made to use heroin in place of morphine due to problems of morphine abuse.
  • 50% of adolescents mistakenly believe that prescription drugs are safer than illegal drugs.
  • 11.6% of those arrested used crack in the previous week.
  • Each year, nearly 360,000 people received treatment specifically for stimulant addiction.

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