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Substance abuse treatment services in Colorado/category/hospitalization-and-inpatient-drug-rehab-centers/images/headers/puerto-rico/colorado


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Drug Facts


  • Underage Drinking: Alcohol use by anyone under the age of 21. In the United States, the legal drinking age is 21.
  • Nearly a third of all stimulant abuse takes the form of amphetamine diet pills.
  • Oxycontin is know on the street as the hillbilly heroin.
  • Steroids can stop growth prematurely and permanently in teenagers who take them.
  • Stimulants are found in every day household items such as tobacco, nicotine and daytime cough medicine.
  • Deaths related to painkillers have risen by over 180% over the last ten years.
  • Its first derivative utilized as medicine was used to put dogs to sleep but was soon produced by Bayer as a sleep aid in 1903 called Veronal
  • The intense high a heroin user seeks lasts only a few minutes.
  • Young people have died from dehydration, exhaustion and heart attack as a result of taking too much Ecstasy.
  • Ketamine is actually a tranquilizer most commonly used in veterinary practice on animals.
  • Non-pharmaceutical fentanyl is sold in the following forms: as a powder; spiked on blotter paper; mixed with or substituted for heroin; or as tablets that mimic other, less potent opioids.
  • Crack cocaine gets its name from how it breaks into little rocks after being produced.
  • After hitting the market, Ativan was used to treat insomnia, vertigo, seizures, and alcohol withdrawal.
  • 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.
  • The largest amount of illicit drug-related emergency room visits in 2011 were cocaine related (over 500,000 visits).
  • Methadone is an opiate agonist that has a series of actions similar to those of heroin and other medications derived from the opium poppy.
  • 90% of people are exposed to illegal substance before the age of 18.
  • 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.
  • 90% of people are exposed to illegal substance before the age of 18.
  • Decreased access to dopamine often results in symptoms similar to Parkinson's disease

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