I need some recent, reliable statistics; care to help?

Question by Amethyst: I need some recent, reliable statistics; care to help?
I would very much like these statistics from reliable, recent sources:
What percentage of drug abusers become addicted
What percentage of teenagers use illegal (NOT prescription) drugs
What amount of money the U.S. has spent on the war on drugs so far this year.
How many arrests out of 1000 (or 100 or 10; doesn’t really matter just out of a number) are drug-related i.e. possession, use, selling
How many people each year die from tobacco
How many people each year die from alcohol poisoning
How many people each year die from alcohol-induced car accidents
What percentage of illegal drug addicts relapse after admitting themselves to treatment
What percentage of convicts in prison on drug-related charges were addicted to drugs at the time of the crime
Please include all of your sources. These statistics should be at least as recent as 2005, and if possible more recent than that. Thank you to anyone who answers.
I have googled these to no end! If you are not going to give me the actual statistics, please don’t answer!

Best answer:

Answer by smarkham01
Try googling

National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA)

and using:
www.cdc.gov/tobacco/data_statistics
www.ncjrs.gov/htm/chapter2.htm

and bear in mind that you have created a dilemma by requiring “NOT prescription” drugs as “prescription” drugs used by anyone other than the person the are prescribed to are illegal:-) and most drug deaths are the result of “prescribed” drugs:-)

Sorry, I’m not in the habit of doing other’s work for them. Enjoy helping them learn how to do it, though. Surprisingly, I found numbers at each URL listed, the top four google responses provided numbers, too! If you’re not willing to put oput a bit of effort – don’t bother asking questions.

Report on Expanding Mental Health and Substance Abuse Treatment in U.S. Criminal Justice System — Harold Pollack, co-director at the University of Chicago Crime Lab, talking about the opportunity to expand mental health and substance abuse treatment in th…


What is addiction? and where can you get help in California?

Question by eros_gary: What is addiction? and where can you get help in California?

Best answer:

Answer by mgaribay74
Summary
People who are addicted cannot control their need for alcohol or other drugs, even in the face of negative health, social or legal consequences.
The illness becomes harder to treat and the related health problems, such as organ disease, become worse.
Addiction is a chronic, but treatable, brain disorder. People who are addicted cannot control their need for alcohol or other drugs, even in the face of negative health, social or legal consequences. This lack of control is the result of alcohol- or drug-induced changes in the brain. Those changes, in turn, cause behavior changes.

The brains of addicted people “have been modified by the drug in such a way that absence of the drug makes a signal to their brain that is equivalent to the signal of when you are starving,” says National Institute on Drug Abuse Director Dr. Nora Volkow. It is “as if the individual was in a state of deprivation, where taking the drug is indispensable for survival. It’s as powerful as that.”

Addiction grows more serious over time. Substance use disorders travel along a continuum. This progression can be measured by the amount, frequency and context of a person’s substance use. As their illness deepens, addicted people need more alcohol or other drugs; they may use more often, and use in situations they never imagined when they first began to drink or take drugs. The illness becomes harder to treat and the related health problems, such as organ disease, become worse.

“This is not something that develops overnight for any individual,” says addiction expert Dr. Kathleen Brady. “Generally there’s a series of steps that individuals go through from experimentation and occasional use [to] the actual loss of control of use. And it really is that process that defines addiction.”

Symptoms of addiction include tolerance (development of resistance to the effects of alcohol or other drugs over time) and withdrawal, a painful or unpleasant physical response when the substance is withheld. Many people with this illness deny that they are addicted. They often emphasize that they enjoy drinking or taking other drugs.

People recovering from addiction can experience a lack of control and return to their substance use at some point in their recovery process. This faltering, common among people with most chronic disorders, is called relapse. To ordinary people, relapse is one of the most perplexing aspects of addiction. Millions of Americans who want to stop using addictive substances suffer tremendously, and relapses can be quite discouraging.

“It is devastating to me when I don’t get [recovery] right,” laments Brian, a Portland, Oregon, coffee shop owner who struggles with his cocaine addiction. “Man, I can’t even describe it. It’s just horrible. The guilt. The depression that comes with it because I screwed up again. It’s an indescribable feeling that’s just – man, it’s low, low, low.”

To appreciate the grips of addiction, imagine a person that “wants to stop doing something and they cannot, despite catastrophic consequences,” says Dr. Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse. “We’re not speaking of little consequences. These are catastrophic. And yet they cannot control their behavior.”

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Answer by parkermbg
Narcotics anonymous!

Go to na.org and follow the links to get info on meetings in your area.

Go to meetings as much as you did dope and actually talk to someone there. Nobody knows better how to deal with your addiction than a fellow addict!

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are cell phones aloud in an inpatient drug rehab center?

Question by xoxokaboomxoxo: are cell phones aloud in an inpatient drug rehab center?
just wondering.. because mybrother checked himself in this past week. and he left his phone, and its still turned so im not sure if he forgot it or its not aloud or what..?

Best answer:

Answer by chica_zarca
Probably not… Just turn it off for him for the time being, the battery will end up dying eventually anyway. I’m sure if he needs to call anyone or anyone wishes to call him, there are phones in the rehab center that he can use. Besides, the nurses there probably want him concentrating on getting better, not making/taking tons of phone calls. They probably also worry that he will be communicating with old [drug-using] friends or dealers whom he should not be having contact with while in rehab.

Best of luck to him!!

Answer by helcow1
Sure they are. How else is someone going to order out for pizza or crack?

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Does Rohypnol cause addiction?

Question by Danielle <3: Does Rohypnol cause addiction?
I am doing a health project, and i need to know if rohypnol causes a physical or mental addiction.
10 points best answer!

Best answer:

Answer by MIK
its both , its a strong benzo , like 10 times stronger than valium , withdraw from benzo’s suck , good luck ,

Answer by silkenwings228
Apparently, you can be both physically and psychologically addicted to Rohypnol:
Rohypnol addiction
The use of Rohypnol itself is dangerous, leading to physical and psychological dependence, which increases with dose and duration of use.

Rohypnol abuse
In the United States, Rohypnol is used widely in Texas where it is popular among high school students. Rohypnol is reported to be readily available in the Miami area, and epidemiologists from that area have stated that it is South Florida’s fastest growing drug problem. Additional reports from Miami indicate that the largest and fastest growing groups of Rohypnol users are high school students who take the drug with alcohol or use it after cocaine ingestion. Two common misperceptions about Rohypnol may explain the drug’s popularity among young people: first, many erroneously believe that the drug is unadulterated – and therefore “safe” – because it comes in pre sealed bubble packs; second, many mistakenly think its use cannot be detected by urinalysis testing.

Illicit use of Rohypnol originated in Europe in the 1970s and has increased worldwide since then. However, the substance did not appear in the United States until the early 1990s. In 1992, a South Florida hotline began receiving calls reporting occasional to chronic abuse of the drug. Around the same time, the drug appeared in Texas as well. Today, use of Rohypnol is one of the fastest growing drug problems in both areas. In addition, the drug appears to be spreading across the United States. As of April 1995, the Drug Enforcement Administration had documented over 1,000 cases of Rohypnol possession across 13 states.

Rohypnol use by youths of all socioeconomic status has been reported. The inexpensive cost, ranging from $ 2 to $ 3 per pill, attracts young users. High school students report use of the drug as a cheap drunk and as a cure for alcohol hangovers. Typically, however, Rohypnol is used along with alcohol and other drugs. College students using Rohypnol report mixing it with beer to enhance the feeling of drunkenness. It has also been reported to be used in combination with marijuana and cocaine, as well as heroin. Rohypnol use appears to be spreading in the United States among high school and college youth. In some areas, it is associated with gangs, and it is becoming known as a club drug.

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statistics say 1 out of 3 people do or have done some form of illegal drug. whats your thought of that.?

Question by tuff*titty: statistics say 1 out of 3 people do or have done some form of illegal drug. whats your thought of that.?
they also say that 9 out of 10 people in the western world take some form of medicine or vitamin suppliment a huge jump from 50 years ago when it was 1 out of 10 people.

Best answer:

Answer by i3rucei3ruce
I don’t do illegal drugs, never have, and never will, but I do take medicine and vitamin supplements.

Answer by ditdit
the people taking the poll were probably on Prozac

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why is it necessary to refer cases of drug abuse to rehabilitation centers?

Question by style: why is it necessary to refer cases of drug abuse to rehabilitation centers?

Best answer:

Answer by antoinette.chua
It’s because they have the experience on how to manage these people in these situations. They are professional enough to know what to do instead of just panicking.

It’s their field.

Answer by Jon
what do u mean by refer, are you a volunteer that work at help hotline? if so then if theyre seeking help that would be the best place to start. but if its jus someone you see that might be using drugs it will have to be themselves that volunteraly check themselves in. onlie nut cases get sent away:P

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