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Mississippi/addiction-information/washington/louisiana/mississippi Treatment Centers

Spanish drug rehab in Mississippi/addiction-information/washington/louisiana/mississippi


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Drug Facts


  • Heroin can be injected, smoked or snorted
  • 60% of teens who have abused prescription painkillers did so before age 15.
  • Heroin is known on the streets as: Smack, horse, black, brown sugar, dope, H, junk, skag, skunk, white horse, China white, Mexican black tar
  • Nearly half (49%) of all college students either binge drink, use illicit drugs or misuse prescription drugs.
  • Over 3 million prescriptions for Suboxone were written in a single year.
  • Illicit drug use costs the United States approximately $181 billion annually.
  • Barbiturates are a class B drug, meaning that any use outside of a prescription is met with prison time and a fine.
  • Heroin can be sniffed, smoked or injected.
  • Ritalin is easy to get, and cheap.
  • In 2011, a Pennsylvania couple stabbed the walls in their apartment to attack the '90 people living in their walls.'
  • Drug abuse and addiction changes your brain chemistry. The longer you use your drug of choice, the more damage is done and the harder it is to go back to 'normal' during drug rehab.
  • Those who have become addicted to heroin and stop using the drug abruptly may have severe withdrawal.
  • More teenagers die from taking prescription drugs than the use of cocaine AND heroin combined.
  • Currently 7.1 million adults, over 2 percent of the population in the U.S. are locked up or on probation; about half of those suffer from some kind of addiction to heroin, alcohol, crack, crystal meth, or some other drug but only 20 percent of those addicts actually get effective treatment as a result of their involvement with the judicial system.
  • Crack cocaine, a crystallized form of cocaine, was developed during the cocaine boom of the 1970s and its use spread in the mid-1980s.
  • The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime estimated the worldwide production of amphetamine-type stimulants, which includes methamphetamine, at nearly 500 metric tons a year, with 24.7 million abusers.
  • After marijuana and alcohol, the most common drugs teens are misuing or abusing are prescription medications.3
  • Authority receive over 10,500 reports of clonazepam abuse every year, and the rate is increasing.
  • Alcohol is a sedative.
  • A tweaker can appear normal - eyes clear, speech concise, and movements brisk; however, a closer look will reveal that the person's eyes are moving ten times faster than normal, the voice has a slight quiver, and movements are quick and jerky.

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