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Indiana/category/hospitalization-and-inpatient-drug-rehab-centers/south-carolina/indiana Treatment Centers

in Indiana/category/hospitalization-and-inpatient-drug-rehab-centers/south-carolina/indiana


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Drug Facts


  • Most people try heroin for the first time in their late teens or early 20s. Anyone can become addictedall races, genders, and ethnicities.
  • Crack cocaine is the crystal form of cocaine, which normally comes in a powder form.
  • Alcohol-impaired driving fatalities accounted for 9,967 deaths (31 percent of overall driving fatalities).
  • Adderall was brought to the prescription drug market as a new way to treat A.D.H.D in 1996, slowly replacing Ritalin.
  • Ambien, the commonly prescribed sleep aid, is also known as Zolpidem.
  • 30% of emergency room admissions from prescription abuse involve opiate-based substances.
  • The effects of heroin can last three to four hours.
  • Dilaudid, considered eight times more potent than morphine, is often called 'drug store heroin' on the streets.
  • Bath salts contain man-made stimulants called cathinone's, which are like amphetamines.
  • Long-term use of painkillers can lead to dependence, even for people who are prescribed them to relieve a medical condition but eventually fall into the trap of abuse and addiction.
  • 50% of adolescents mistakenly believe that prescription drugs are safer than illegal drugs.
  • Barbiturates have been used for depression and even by vets for animal anesthesia yet people take them in order to relax and for insomnia.
  • 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 sale of painkillers has increased by over 300% since 1999.
  • About 16 million individuals currently abuse prescription medications
  • Taking Steroids raises the risk of aggression and irritability to over 56 percent.
  • In 2014, there were over 39,000 unintentional drug overdose deaths in the United States
  • Alcohol blocks messages trying to get to the brain, altering a person's vision, perception, movements, emotions and hearing.
  • The penalties for drug offenses vary from state to state.
  • Alcohol affects the central nervous system, thereby controlling all bodily functions.

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