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Drug rehab for pregnant women in Pennsylvania/category/arkansas/connecticut/pennsylvania


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Drug Facts


  • The sale of painkillers has increased by over 300% since 1999.
  • Tweaking makes achieving the original high difficult, causing frustration and unstable behavior in the user.
  • Its first derivative utilized as medicine was used to put dogs to sleep but was soon produced by Bayer as a sleep aid in 1903 called Veronal
  • People inject, snort, or smoke heroin. Some people mix heroin with crack cocaine, called a speedball.
  • Methadone is a highly addictive drug, at least as addictive as heroin.
  • Street names for fentanyl or for fentanyl-laced heroin include Apache, China Girl, China White, Dance Fever, Friend, Goodfella, Jackpot, Murder 8, TNT, and Tango and Cash.
  • Peyote is approximately 4000 times less potent than LSD.
  • Women who had an alcoholic parent are more likely to become an alcoholic than men who have an alcoholic parent.
  • Other psychological symptoms include manic behavior, psychosis (losing touch with reality) and aggression, commonly known as 'Roid Rage'.
  • Cocaine was originally used for its medical effects and was first introduced as a surgical anesthetic.
  • 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.
  • Each year Alcohol use results in nearly 2,000 college student's deaths.
  • 30% of emergency room admissions from prescription abuse involve opiate-based substances.
  • Phenobarbital was soon discovered and marketed as well as many other barbituric acid derivatives
  • From 2011 to 2016, bath salt use has declined by almost 92%.
  • Opiate-based drugs have risen by over 80% in less than four years.
  • Unintentional deaths by poison were related to prescription drug overdoses in 84% of the poison cases.
  • Heroin use has increased across the US among men and women, most age groups, and all income levels.
  • Methamphetamine blocks dopamine re-uptake, methamphetamine also increases the release of dopamine, leading to much higher concentrations in the synapse, which can be toxic to nerve terminals.
  • When abused orally, side effects can include slurred speech, seizures, delirium and vertigo.

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