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Drug Facts


  • Emergency room admissions due to Subutex abuse has risen by over 200% in just three years.
  • By survey, almost 50% of teens believe that prescription drugs are much safer than illegal street drugs60% to 70% say that home medicine cabinets are their source of drugs.
  • Alcohol is the number one substance-related cause of depression in people.
  • The U.S. utilizes over 65% of the world's supply of Dilaudid.
  • Adderall was brought to the prescription drug market as a new way to treat A.D.H.D in 1996, slowly replacing Ritalin.
  • After time, a heroin user's sense of smell and taste become numb and may disappear.
  • The drug Diazepam has over 500 different brand-names worldwide.
  • Depressants are highly addictive drugs, and when chronic users or abusers stop taking them, they can experience severe withdrawal symptoms, including anxiety, insomnia and muscle tremors.
  • Approximately 65% of adolescents say that home medicine cabinets are the main source of drugs.
  • Mixing Ambien with alcohol can cause respiratory distress, coma and death.
  • Cocaine causes a short-lived, intense high that is immediately followed by the oppositeintense depression, edginess and a craving for more of the drug.
  • Withdrawal from methadone is often even more difficult than withdrawal from heroin.
  • Meth users often have bad teeth from poor oral hygiene, dry mouth as meth can crack and deteriorate teeth.
  • Oxycodone has the greatest potential for abuse and the greatest dangers.
  • Ativan, a known Benzodiazepine, was first marketed in 1977 as an anti-anxiety drug.
  • Over 60% of deaths from drug overdoses are accredited to prescription drugs.
  • 6.8 million people with an addiction have a mental illness.
  • Popular among children and parents were the Cocaine toothache drops.
  • Adolf von Baeyer, the creator of barbiturates, won a Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1905 for his work in in chemical research.
  • Heroin was commercially developed by Bayer Pharmaceutical and was marketed by Bayer and other companies (c. 1900) for several medicinal uses including cough suppression.

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