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Drug rehab with residential beds for children in Connecticut/CT/branford/connecticut


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Drug Facts


  • Ambien, the commonly prescribed sleep aid, is also known as Zolpidem.
  • One in five adolescents have admitted to abusing inhalants.
  • Production and trafficking soared again in the 1990's in relation to organized crime in the Southwestern United States and Mexico.
  • Fewer than one out of ten North Carolinian's who use illegal drugs, and only one of 20 with alcohol problems, get state funded help, and the treatment they do receive is out of date and inadequate.
  • From 1961-1980 the Anti-Depressant boom hit the market in the United States.
  • Most people use drugs for the first time when they are teenagers.
  • When taken, meth and crystal meth create a false sense of well-being and energy, and so a person will tend to push his body faster and further than it is meant to go.
  • Nearly a third of all stimulant abuse takes the form of amphetamine diet pills.
  • These physical signs are more difficult to identify if the tweaker has been using a depressant such as alcohol; however, if the tweaker has been using a depressant, his or her negative feelings - including paranoia and frustration - can increase substantially.
  • According to a new survey, nearly two thirds of young women in the United Kingdom admitted to binge drinking so excessively they had no memory of the night before the next morning.
  • Barbiturates have been use in the past to treat a variety of symptoms from insomnia and dementia to neonatal jaundice
  • Women who had an alcoholic parent are more likely to become an alcoholic than men who have an alcoholic parent.
  • Benzodiazepines are usually swallowed. Some people also inject and snort them.
  • Steroids are often abused by those who want to build muscle mass.
  • Oxycontin has risen by over 80% within three years.
  • Disability-Adjusted Life-Years (DALYs): A measure of years of life lost or lived in less than full health.
  • An estimated 20 percent of U.S. college students are afflicted with Alcoholism.
  • Approximately 13.5 million people worldwide take opium-like substances (opioids), including 9.2 million who use heroin.
  • Meperidine (brand name Demerol) and hydromorphone (Dilaudid) come in tablets and propoxyphene (Darvon) in capsules, but all three have been known to be crushed and injected, snorted or smoked.
  • Authority receive over 10,500 reports of clonazepam abuse every year, and the rate is increasing.

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