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Spanish drug rehab in Washington/category/residential-long-term-drug-treatment/washington


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Drug Facts


  • Alcohol is a sedative.
  • Decreased access to dopamine often results in symptoms similar to Parkinson's disease
  • Benzodiazepines ('Benzos'), like brand-name medications Valium and Xanax, are among the most commonly prescribed depressants in the US.
  • Stimulants are found in every day household items such as tobacco, nicotine and daytime cough medicine.
  • From 1961-1980 the Anti-Depressant boom hit the market in the United States.
  • An estimated 20 percent of U.S. college students are afflicted with Alcoholism.
  • 6.8 million people with an addiction have a mental illness.
  • Meth, or methamphetamine, is a powerfully addictive stimulant that is both long-lasting and toxic to the brain. Its chemistry is similar to speed (amphetamine), but meth has far more dangerous effects on the body's central nervous system.
  • 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.
  • There is inpatient treatment and outpatient.
  • 93% of the world's opium supply came from Afghanistan.
  • Heroin can be injected, smoked or snorted
  • 90% of people are exposed to illegal substance before the age of 18.
  • Barbiturates have been used for depression and even by vets for animal anesthesia yet people take them in order to relax and for insomnia.
  • Heroin usemore than doubledamong young adults ages 1825 in the past decade.
  • Methamphetamine is taken orally, smoked, snorted, or dissolved in water or alcohol and injected.
  • Two-thirds of people 12 and older (68%) who have abused prescription pain relievers within the past year say they got them from a friend or relative.1
  • The generic form of Oxycontin poses a bigger threat to those who abuse it, raising the number of poison control center calls remarkably.
  • Ecstasy can stay in one's system for 1-5 days.
  • There were approximately 160,000 amphetamine and methamphetamine related emergency room visits in 2011.

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