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Indiana/category/substance-abuse-treatment/missouri/indiana Treatment Centers

in Indiana/category/substance-abuse-treatment/missouri/indiana


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Drug Facts


  • Excessive alcohol use costs the country approximately $235 billion annually.
  • According to the Department of Justice, the top destination in the United States for heroin shipments is the Chicago metro area.
  • Increased or prolonged use of methamphetamine can cause sleeplessness, loss of appetite, increased blood pressure, paranoia, psychosis, aggression, disordered thinking, extreme mood swings and sometimes hallucinations.
  • The most powerful prescription painkillers are called opioids, which are opium-like compounds.
  • Oxycontin has risen by over 80% within three years.
  • 37% of people claim that the U.S. is losing ground in the war on prescription drug abuse.
  • Meth, or methamphetamine, is a powerfully addictive stimulant that is both long-lasting and toxic to the brain. Its chemistry is similar to speed (amphetamine), but meth has far more dangerous effects on the body's central nervous system.
  • Cocaine comes from the leaves of the coca bush (Erythroxylum coca), which is native to South America.
  • Girls seem to become addicted to nicotine faster than boys do.
  • Stimulants are prescribed in the treatment of obesity.
  • 54% of high school seniors do not think regular steroid use is harmful, the lowest number since 1980, when the National Institute on Drug Abuse started asking about perception on steroids.
  • Ambien dissolves readily in water, becoming a popular date rape drug.
  • People inject, snort, or smoke heroin. Some people mix heroin with crack cocaine, called a speedball.
  • In 1898 a German chemical company launched a new medicine called Heroin'.
  • Almost 1 in every 4 teens in America say they have misused or abused a prescription drug.3
  • Ritalin is the common name for methylphenidate, classified by the Drug Enforcement Administration as a Schedule II narcoticthe same classification as cocaine, morphine and amphetamines.
  • 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.
  • Oxycodone is sold under many trade names, such as Percodan, Endodan, Roxiprin, Percocet, Endocet, Roxicet and OxyContin.
  • Adolf von Baeyer, the creator of barbiturates, won a Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1905 for his work in in chemical research.
  • Outlaw motorcycle gangs are primarily into distributing marijuana and methamphetamine.

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