News/Information/Articles
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No More Babysitting for Pete Doherty. No More Babysitting for Pete Doherty.
The troubled Babyshambles frontman vowed Wednesday to stay ...
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Drugs and Guns. Mexico: Dynamics of the Gun Trade.
The number of drug-related killings in Mexico already has surpassed ...
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'These drugs are everywhere'; 'These drugs are everywhere'; Prescription overdose deaths claim more local victims.
NEWBURYPORT, New Hampshire - When ...
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Former principal charged with shoplifting. Former principal charged with shoplifting.
WEST NEWBURY,New Hampshire - A former elementary school principal convicted several ...
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DUI charges in Idaho. Manslaughter suspect jailed on DUI charge.
SANDPOINT,Idaho -- An Oldtown,Idaho man awaiting trial ...
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Meth lab dicovered in Illinois. Walk uncovers meth lab hiding place.
METH LAB UNCOVERED - A meth lab uncovered ...
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The "new cartel" Venezuelan official accuses U.S. of aiding drug trafficking, calls DEA a 'new cartel'
CARACAS, Venezuela: Venezuela ...
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Drug dealers using the web to sell to teens Drugs aren't just on the streets anymore, now they're coming into homes by way of ...
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Drug czar speaks in Las Vegas about prescription drug abuse LAS VEGAS (AP) - White House drug czar John Walters said Thursday that creating an ...
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The other side: Abusing prescriptions CLEVELAND -- While most people live in a world where the local pharmacists prescribe the ...
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Prescription drug abuse becoming a growing problem MANSFIELD -- The conviction of an Ashland man and the death of two teenagers high ...
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Prescription drug arrests on the rise ELIZABETHTON — Police here say they are arresting more drivers these days who are taking ...
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Drug
Facts
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The major source of Hydrocodone to the street has been through bogus call-in and forged prescriptions, professional diversion through unscrupulous pharmacists, doctors, and dentists, and large-scale thefts. The pills have been sold for $2 to $10 per table
Hydrocodone - a mix of synthetic codeine and acetaminophen - is the most abused prescription drug in the United States, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration.
Nine years ago the Nevada Board of Pharmacy considered moving hydrocodone to Schedule II, but ended up voting against the plan, according to its attorney, Louis Ling.
Hydrocodone will react as a normal opiate in the available field test kits.
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Increase in youth abusing prescription drugs
A growing number of American teenagers and young adults are abusing prescription drugs, a government report says, with non-medical use of pain relievers and tranquillizers reaching record highs.
In 2001, nearly three million young people, age 12 to 17, reported that they had used prescription drugs for non-medical reasons at least once, the government said. The number of new users has been climbing since the mid-'80s.
Federal officials, who released the report Thursday, were promoting their education campaign highlighting the dangers of these drugs when used improperly.
"Abuse of prescription drugs can lead to addiction, misdiagnosis of serious illness, life-threatening circumstances and even death," said Charles Curie, administrator of the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, a branch of the Department of Health and Human Services, which released the report Thursday.
He was being joined by officials from the Food and Drug Administration in discouraging misuse of these drugs. The education effort includes posters, brochures and print advertisements.
A companion report, based on a survey of hospital emergency rooms, found a steady, significant rise in visits for opiate abuse since 1994.
In 2001, there were about 90,000 visits for abuse of these narcotics, a 117 per cent rise over 1994, according to data from the Drug Abuse Warning Network. The largest increases were found in abuse of oxycodone, methadone and morphine.
The average age of these ER patients was 37.
The first report is based on the National Household Survey of Drug Abuse, an annual survey that included 69,000 people in 2001. That includes more than 45,000 people age 12 to 25.
It found that in 2001, 36 million Americans - 16 per cent of all people age 12 and up - had used prescription drugs non-medically at least once in their lives. That includes people who took a drug that had not been prescribed for them and those who took drugs only for the experience or feeling they caused.
Among young adults, age 18 to 25, seven million had used these drugs non-medically at least once.
Among teens, girls were more likely than boys to have misused drugs; it was opposite among young adults. Abuse was more common among whites than Hispanics, blacks or Asians.
The number of new users has risen sharply since the mid-1980s. The number misusing pain relievers climbed from about 400,000 then to two million in 2000.
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