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Mississippi/disclaimer/new-hampshire/mississippi Treatment Centers

Teenage drug rehab centers in Mississippi/disclaimer/new-hampshire/mississippi


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Drug Facts


  • The U.N. suspects that over 9 million people actively use ecstasy worldwide.
  • In 1898 a German chemical company launched a new medicine called Heroin'
  • In the early 1900s snorting Cocaine was popular, until the drug was banned by the Harrison Act in 1914.
  • Women are at a higher risk than men for liver damage, brain damage and heart damage due to alcohol intake.
  • Withdrawal from methadone is often even more difficult than withdrawal from heroin.
  • In Hamilton County, 7,300 people were served by street outreach, emergency shelter and transitional housing programs in 2007, according to the Cincinnati/Hamilton County Continuum of Care for the Homeless.
  • Drug addiction is a serious problem that can be treated and managed throughout its course.
  • Oxycodone has the greatest potential for abuse and the greatest dangers.
  • In 2011, a Pennsylvania couple stabbed the walls in their apartment to attack the '90 people living in their walls.'
  • In the past 15 years, abuse of prescription drugs, including powerful opioid painkillers such as oxycodone and hydrocodone, has risen alarmingly among all ages, growing fastest among college-age adults, who lead all age groups in the misuse of medications.
  • The word cocaine refers to the drug in a powder form or crystal form.
  • Heroin is made by collecting sap from the flower of opium poppies.
  • Alcohol blocks messages trying to get to the brain, altering a person's vision, perception, movements, emotions and hearing.
  • Cocaine can be snorted, injected, sniffed or smoked.
  • Adderall originally came about by accident.
  • Other names of ecstasy include Eckies, E, XTC, pills, pingers, bikkies, flippers, and molly.
  • Tweaking makes achieving the original high difficult, causing frustration and unstable behavior in the user.
  • 30% of emergency room admissions from prescription abuse involve opiate-based substances.
  • Brain changes that occur over time with drug use challenge an addicted person's self-control and interfere with their ability to resist intense urges to take drugs.
  • 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.

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