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Drug Facts


  • Street amphetamine: bennies, black beauties, copilots, eye-openers, lid poppers, pep pills, speed, uppers, wake-ups, and white crosses28
  • Hallucinogens also cause physical changes such as increased heart rate, elevating blood pressure and dilating pupils.
  • 92% of those who begin using Ecstasy later turn to other drugs including marijuana, amphetamines, cocaine and heroin.
  • Illicit drug use in the United States has been increasing.
  • Heroin use more than doubled among young adults ages 1825 in the past decade
  • 30% of emergency room admissions from prescription abuse involve opiate-based substances.
  • 9% of teens in a recent study reported using prescription pain relievers not prescribed for them in the past year, and 5% (1 in 20) reported doing so in the past month.3
  • Heroin enters the brain very quickly, making it particularly addictive. It's estimated that almost one-fourth of the people who try heroin become addicted.
  • In the early 1900s snorting Cocaine was popular, until the drug was banned by the Harrison Act in 1914.
  • The U.N. suspects that over 9 million people actively use ecstasy worldwide.
  • Tweaking makes achieving the original high difficult, causing frustration and unstable behavior in the user.
  • Every day 2,000 teens in the United States try prescription drugs to get high for the first time
  • Krododil users rarely live more than one year after taking it.
  • Prescription opioid pain medicines such as OxyContin and Vicodin have effects similar to heroin.
  • In Alabama during the year 2006 a total of 20,340 people were admitted to Drug rehab or Alcohol rehab programs.
  • Drug use is highest among people in their late teens and twenties.
  • About 72% of all cases reported to poison centers for substance use were calls from people's homes.
  • Outlaw motorcycle gangs are primarily into distributing marijuana and methamphetamine.
  • Alcohol increases birth defects in babies known as Fetal Alcohol Syndrome.
  • Over 500,000 individuals have abused Ambien.

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