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Buprenorphine used in drug treatment in Alaska/category/health-and-substance-abuse-services-mix/alaska


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Drug Facts


  • Crack cocaine gets its name from how it breaks into little rocks after being produced.
  • Over 500,000 individuals have abused Ambien.
  • Over a quarter million of drug-related emergency room visits are related to heroin abuse.
  • Cocaine comes from the leaves of the coca bush (Erythroxylum coca), which is native to South America.
  • Crack Cocaine use became enormously popular in the mid-1980's, particularly in urban areas.
  • Nearly 50% of all emergency room admissions from poisonings are attributed to drug abuse or misuse.
  • 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.
  • 50% of adolescents mistakenly believe that prescription drugs are safer than illegal drugs.
  • Cocaine first appeared in American society in the 1880s.
  • Heroin is sold and used in a number of forms including white or brown powder, a black sticky substance (tar heroin), and solid black chunks.
  • Almost 50% of high school seniors have abused a drug of some kind.
  • Inhalants go through the lungs and into the bloodstream, and are quickly distributed to the brain and other organs in the body.
  • Abused by an estimated one in five teens, prescription drugs are second only to alcohol and marijuana as the substances they use to get high.
  • In 2010, U.S. Poison Control Centers received 304 calls regarding Bath Salts.
  • 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.
  • The effects of ecstasy are usually felt about 20 minutes to an hour after it's taken and last for around 6 hours.
  • Two-thirds of the ER visits related to Ambien were by females.
  • Mescaline (AKA: Cactus, cactus buttons, cactus joint, mesc, mescal, mese, mezc, moon, musk, topi): occurs naturally in certain types of cactus plants, including the peyote cactus.
  • In Connecticut overdoses have claimed at least eight lives of high school and college-age students in communities large and small in 2008.
  • Over 4 million people have used oxycontin for nonmedical purposes.

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