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  • Drug Overdose Facts
  • Amphetamine users sometimes take depressant drugs, such as barbiturates, alcohol, and opiates, as a sleep aid or to compensate for the stimulant effects of the drug.
  • For heroin addicts, craving and relapse may occur weeks and months after withdrawal symptoms are long gone.
  • Being in a drug rehab setting makes it less likely that the individual will relapse back into use of Vicodin, as there will be a sufficient support system available at the facility and there wont be any Vicodin around.
  • A Blood Alcohol Concentration of 0.20 BAC will ultimately in the following: Feeling dazed, confused, disoriented. The individual may need assistance to stand or walk, and if they do become injured will feel little or no pain. Some individuals at this level will experience nausea and vomiting, and with the gag reflex being impaired it is possible to choke on their own vomit. Blackouts are also fairly common at this level so the individual may not remember what has happened.
  • How alcohol ultimately effects someone can vary from person to person, depending on whether or not they have eaten, how thirsty they are and even the time of day it is.
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Native American or Alaska Native Languages

Native Americans and Alaska Natives have much higher rates of substance abuse and addiction than other ethnicities, a circumstance which must be addressed for these cultures to survive. In fact, Native American and Alaska youth have some of the highest rates of alcohol and drug abuse in the country. While the reasons may vary from person to person, most of the reasons for the high rates of substance abuse among Native American and Alaska natives are cultural ones. The most obvious obstacles to treating Native Americans and Alaska Natives for substance abuse and addiction are language and culture differences. This is why it is vital that Native Americans and Alaska Natives receive substance abuse treatment in a drug rehab program that is specifically catered to this ethnic group, but most importantly in one that takes into the account the need to provide treatment in their language.

Native American Or Alaska Native Language Services category listings in Bowstring, Minnesota:

  • Leech Lake
    39.1 miles from Bowstring, Minnesota
    Leech Lake is a Drug Rehabilitation Facility that is located at:

    190 Sailstar Drive
    Cass Lake, MN. 56633
    218-335-4514

    Treatment Services: Substance Abuse Programs, Outpatient Treatment, Native American Or Alaska Native Language Services
    Payment Options: Self Pay (Out of Pocket), Medicaid Coverage, Medicare Coverage, State Financed Insurance besides Medicaid, Private or Personal Health Insurance, Income Based Payment (Sliding Scale)