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Massachusetts/category/self-payment-drug-rehab/massachusetts Treatment Centers

General health services in Massachusetts/category/self-payment-drug-rehab/massachusetts


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Drug Facts


  • Over 52% of teens who use bath salts also combine them with other drugs.
  • Substance abuse and addiction also affects other areas, such as broken families, destroyed careers, death due to negligence or accident, domestic violence, physical abuse, and child abuse.
  • In Utah, more than 95,000 adults and youths need substance-abuse treatment services, according to the Utah Division of Substance and Mental Health 2007 annual report.
  • 28% of teens know at least 1 person who has tried ecstasy.
  • Opiate-based abuse causes over 17,000 deaths annually.
  • Each year, nearly 360,000 people received treatment specifically for stimulant addiction.
  • Foreign producers now supply much of the U.S. Methamphetamine market, and attempts to bring that production under control have been problematic.
  • Selling and sharing prescription drugs is not legal.
  • Children who learn the dangers of drugs and alcohol early have a better chance of not getting hooked.
  • Adderall is a Schedule II controlled substance, meaning that it has a high potential for addiction.
  • Methamphetamine is taken orally, smoked, snorted, or dissolved in water or alcohol and injected.
  • Adderall originally came about by accident.
  • Methamphetamine is a white crystalline drug that people take by snorting it (inhaling through the nose), smoking it or injecting it with a needle.
  • In Connecticut overdoses have claimed at least eight lives of high school and college-age students in communities large and small in 2008.
  • Most heroin is injected, creating additional risks for the user, who faces the danger of AIDS or other infection on top of the pain of addiction.
  • Synthetic drugs, also referred to as designer or club drugs, are chemically-created in a lab to mimic another drug such as marijuana, cocaine or morphine.
  • Over 60 percent of Americans on Anti-Depressants have been taking them for two or more years.
  • The act in 1914 prohibited the import of coca leaves and Cocaine, except for pharmaceutical purposes.
  • The most powerful prescription painkillers are called opioids, which are opium-like compounds.
  • Ecstasy speeds up heart rate and blood pressure and disrupts the brain's ability to regulate body temperature, which can result in overheating to the point of hyperthermia.

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