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Buprenorphine used in drug treatment in Massachusetts/category/outpatient-drug-rehab-centers/new-hampshire/utah/massachusetts


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Drug Facts


  • Coke Bugs or Snow Bugs are an illusion of bugs crawling underneath one's skin and often experienced by Crack Cocaine users.
  • Brand names of Bath Salts include Blizzard, Blue Silk, Charge+, Ivory Snow, Ivory Wave, Ocean Burst, Pure Ivory, Purple Wave, Snow Leopard, Stardust, Vanilla Sky, White Dove, White Knight and White Lightning.
  • Drug use is highest among people in their late teens and twenties.
  • Street gang members primarily turn cocaine into crack cocaine.
  • Because heroin abusers do not know the actual strength of the drug or its true contents, they are at a high risk of overdose or death.
  • Nearly a third of all stimulant abuse takes the form of amphetamine diet pills.
  • 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.
  • Methamphetamine is an illegal drug in the same class as cocaine and other powerful street drugs.
  • 64% of teens say they have used prescription pain killers that they got from a friend or family member.
  • More than fourty percent of people who begin drinking before age 15 eventually become alcoholics.
  • Cocaine is also the most common drug found in addition to alcohol in alcohol-related emergency room visits.
  • In 2007, methamphetamine lab seizures increased slightly in California, but remained considerably low compared to years past.
  • Nearly 300,000 Americans received treatment for hallucinogens in 2011.
  • 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.
  • Overdoses caused by painkillers are more common than heroin and cocaine overdoses combined.
  • From 1992 to 2003, teen abuse of prescription drugs jumped 212 percent nationally, nearly three times the increase of misuse among other adults.
  • These days, taking pills is acceptable: there is the feeling that there is a "pill for everything".
  • The U.N. suspects that over 9 million people actively use ecstasy worldwide.
  • 1 in 5 adolescents have admitted to using tranquilizers for nonmedical purposes.
  • A syringe of morphine was, in a very real sense, a magic wand,' states David Courtwright in Dark Paradise. '

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