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Drug Facts


  • After hitting the market, Ativan was used to treat insomnia, vertigo, seizures, and alcohol withdrawal.
  • Heroin can be sniffed, smoked or injected.
  • In 2010, 42,274 emergency rooms visits were due to Ambien.
  • According to the latest drug information from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), drug abuse costs the United States over $600 billion annually in health care treatments, lost productivity, and crime.
  • Opiates, mainly heroin, account for 18% of the admissions for drug and alcohol treatment in the US.
  • Some designer drugs have risen by 80% within a single year.
  • 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.
  • Women suffer more memory loss and brain damage than men do who drink the same amount of alcohol for the same period of time.
  • Authority receive over 10,500 reports of clonazepam abuse every year, and the rate is increasing.
  • Crack causes a short-lived, intense high that is immediately followed by the oppositeintense depression, edginess and a craving for more of the drug.
  • When abused orally, side effects can include slurred speech, seizures, delirium and vertigo.
  • Heroin tablets manufactured by The Fraser Tablet Company were marketed for the relief of asthma.
  • Ecstasy use has been 12 times more prevalent since it became known as club drug.
  • Medical consequences of chronic heroin injection abuse include scarred and/or collapsed veins, bacterial infections of the blood vessels and heart valves, abscesses (boils) and other soft-tissue infections, and liver or kidney disease.
  • Despite 20 years of scientific evidence showing that drug treatment programs do work, the feds fail to offer enough of them to prisoners.
  • 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.
  • Nitrous oxide is a medical gas that is referred to as "laughing gas" among users.
  • It is estimated 20.4 million people age 12 or older have tried methamphetamine at sometime in their lives.
  • Drug abuse and addiction is a chronic, relapsing, compulsive disease that often requires formal treatment, and may call for multiple courses of treatment.
  • Medial drugs include prescription medication, cold and allergy meds, pain relievers and antibiotics.

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