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Rehabilitation Categories


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Drug Facts


  • 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.
  • Despite 20 years of scientific evidence showing that drug treatment programs do work, the feds fail to offer enough of them to prisoners.
  • In 2011, over 800,000 Americans reported having an addiction to cocaine.
  • Bath salts contain man-made stimulants called cathinone's, which are like amphetamines.
  • Between 2002 and 2006, over a half million of teens aged 12 to 17 had used inhalants.
  • 7.5 million have used cocaine at least once in their life, 3.5 million in the last year and 1.5 million in the past month.
  • 12 to 17 year olds abuse prescription drugs more than they abuse ecstasy, crack/cocaine, heroin, and methamphetamine combined.
  • Meth use in the United States varies geographically, with the highest rate of use in the West and the lowest in the Northeast.
  • A young German pharmacist called Friedrich Sertrner (1783-1841) had first applied chemical analysis to plant drugs, by purifying in 1805 the main active ingredient of opium
  • 50% of teens believe that taking prescription drugs is much safer than using illegal street drugs.
  • From 1961-1980 the Anti-Depressant boom hit the market in the United States.
  • Alcohol is a sedative.
  • Heroin can be a white or brown powder, or a black sticky substance known as black tar heroin.
  • Heroin is made by collecting sap from the flower of opium poppies.
  • The addictive properties of Barbiturates finally gained recognition in the 1950's.
  • In the early 1900s snorting Cocaine was popular, until the drug was banned by the Harrison Act in 1914.
  • Methadone is a highly addictive drug, at least as addictive as heroin.
  • Adderall was brought to the prescription drug market as a new way to treat A.D.H.D in 1996, slowly replacing Ritalin.
  • Getting blackout drunk doesn't actually make you forget: the brain temporarily loses the ability to make memories.
  • 64% of teens say they have used prescription pain killers that they got from a friend or family member.

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