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in Connecticut/category/mental-health-services/colorado/connecticut


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We have carefully sorted the drug rehab centers in connecticut/category/mental-health-services/colorado/connecticut. Filter your search for a treatment program or facility with specific categories. You may also find a resource using our addiction treatment search. For additional information on connecticut/category/mental-health-services/colorado/connecticut drug rehab please phone our toll free helpline.

Drug Facts


  • Teens who start with alcohol are more likely to try cocaine than teens who do not drink.
  • One in five adolescents have admitted to abusing inhalants.
  • Children, innocent drivers, families, the environment, all are affected by drug addiction even if they have never taken a drink or tried a drug.
  • Like amphetamine, methamphetamine increases activity, decreases appetite and causes a general sense of well-being.
  • Ecstasy is sometimes mixed with substances such as rat poison.
  • Street amphetamine: bennies, black beauties, copilots, eye-openers, lid poppers, pep pills, speed, uppers, wake-ups, and white crosses28
  • Barbiturates have been used for depression and even by vets for animal anesthesia yet people take them in order to relax and for insomnia.
  • 1.3% of high school seniors have tired bath salts.
  • Methamphetamine can be swallowed, snorted, smoked and injected by users.
  • About one in ten Americans over the age of 12 take an Anti-Depressant.
  • Methamphetamine has many nicknamesmeth, crank, chalk or speed being the most common.
  • Alcohol is a sedative.
  • An estimated 20 percent of U.S. college students are afflicted with Alcoholism.
  • Outlaw motorcycle gangs are primarily into distributing marijuana and methamphetamine.
  • There are approximately 5,000 LSD-related emergency room visits per year.
  • Drug addiction and abuse can be linked to at least of all major crimes committed in the United States.
  • Crack Cocaine is categorized next to PCP and Meth as an illegal Schedule II drug.
  • In Connecticut overdoses have claimed at least eight lives of high school and college-age students in communities large and small in 2008.
  • These days, taking pills is acceptable: there is the feeling that there is a "pill for everything".
  • 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

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