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Drug Facts


  • 30% of emergency room admissions from prescription abuse involve opiate-based substances.
  • During the 1850s, opium addiction was a major problem in the United States.
  • Afghanistan is the leading producer and cultivator of opium worldwide and manufactures 74% of illicit opiates. However, Mexico is the leading supplier to the U.S
  • Over 500,000 individuals have abused Ambien.
  • Substance abuse costs the health care system about $11 billion, with overall costs reaching $193 billion.
  • When a person uses cocaine there are five new neural pathways created in the brain directly associated with addiction.
  • 3.3 million deaths, or 5.9 percent of all global deaths (7.6 percent for men and 4.0 percent for women), were attributable to alcohol consumption.
  • Babies can be born addicted to drugs.
  • Non-pharmaceutical fentanyl is sold in the following forms: as a powder; spiked on blotter paper; mixed with or substituted for heroin; or as tablets that mimic other, less potent opioids.
  • There were approximately 160,000 amphetamine and methamphetamine related emergency room visits in 2011.
  • Prescription medications are legal drugs.
  • In 1898 a German chemical company launched a new medicine called Heroin'.
  • 90% of Americans with a substance abuse problem started smoking marijuana, drinking or using other drugs before age 18.
  • More than fourty percent of people who begin drinking before age 15 eventually become alcoholics.
  • Heroin is manufactured from opium poppies cultivated in four primary source areas: South America, Southeast and Southwest Asia, and Mexico.
  • In 2011, over 65 million doses of Krokodil were seized within just three months.
  • 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.
  • Fewer than one out of ten North Carolinian's who use illegal drugs, and only one of 20 with alcohol problems, get state funded help, and the treatment they do receive is out of date and inadequate.
  • 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.
  • One of the strongest forms of Amphetamines is Meth, which can come in powder, tablet or crystal form.

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