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Drug rehab for persons with HIV or AIDS in Texas/TX/carrollton/utah/texas


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Drug Facts


  • Adderall is a Schedule II controlled substance, meaning that it has a high potential for addiction.
  • Rock, Kryptonite, Base, Sugar Block, Hard Rock, Apple Jacks, and Topo (Spanish) are popular terms used for Crack Cocaine.
  • 50% of adolescents mistakenly believe that prescription drugs are safer than illegal drugs.
  • In Hamilton County, 7,300 people were served by street outreach, emergency shelter and transitional housing programs in 2007, according to the Cincinnati/Hamilton County Continuum of Care for the Homeless.
  • Heroin is known on the streets as: Smack, horse, black, brown sugar, dope, H, junk, skag, skunk, white horse, China white, Mexican black tar
  • Because it is smoked, the effects of crack cocaine are more immediate and more intense than that of powdered cocaine.
  • The United States consumes 80% of the world's pain medication while only having 6% of the world's population.
  • Synthetic drug stimulants, also known as cathinones, mimic the effects of ecstasy or MDMA. Bath salts and Molly are examples of synthetic cathinones.
  • Drug abuse is linked to at least half of the crimes committed in the U.S.
  • The most commonly abused prescription drugs are pain medications, sleeping pills, anti-anxiety medications and stimulants (used to treat attention deficit/hyperactivity disorders).1
  • Amphetamines have been used to treat fatigue, migraines, depression, alcoholism, epilepsy and schizophrenia.
  • Methamphetamine can be detected for 2-4 days in a person's system.
  • There is inpatient treatment and outpatient.
  • In the course of the 20th century, more than 2500 barbiturates were synthesized, 50 of which were eventually employed clinically.
  • More teens die from prescription drugs than heroin/cocaine combined.
  • Painkillers are among the most commonly abused prescription drugs.
  • Alcohol kills more young people than all other drugs combined.
  • Anorectic drugs have increased in order to suppress appetites, especially among teenage girls and models.
  • A heroin overdose causes slow and shallow breathing, blue lips and fingernails, clammy skin, convulsions, coma, and can be fatal.
  • In Connecticut overdoses have claimed at least eight lives of high school and college-age students in communities large and small in 2008.

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