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  • Drug Overdose Facts
  • Fentanyl has become a recreational drug of choice and individuals who wish to make a significant profit by selling impure fentanyl to unwitting addicts have been responsible for many deaths.
  • Although amphetamines were once prescribed to control obesity and depression their use for these disorders was discontinued because patients became quickly and seriously dependent.
  • Drugs that are commonly classified as depressants include opiates, alcohol, and benzodiazepines; a depressant overdose is most often characterized by slow or shallow breathing, blue lips, cold or clammy skin, slow or faint pulse, snoring or gurgling noises and unresponsiveness.
  • Improved breeds of marijuana, indoor cultivation and the use of sophisticated cultivation techniques have allowed marijuana cultivators to make significantly more potent versions of marijuana.
  • Between 2007 and 2010, the use of marijuana among drug users in the U.S. increased from 5.8 to 6.9 percent, and the number of users in the nation increased from 14.4 million to 17.4 million.
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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 situation 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 abuse among Native American and Alaska natives are cultural ones. The biggest barrier to treating Native Americans and Alaska Natives for substance abuse are culture differences and language. This is why it is crucial 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 can provide treatment and therapy in the Native American or Alaska Native languages.

Native American Or Alaska Native Language Services category listings in Muldrow, Oklahoma:

  • Eastern Oklahoma Medical Center
    29.3 miles from Muldrow, Oklahoma
    Eastern Oklahoma Medical Center is a Substance Abuse Treatment Program that is located at:

    105 Wall Street
    Poteau, OK. 74953
    918-635-3580

    Treatment Services: Hospital Inpatient Programs, Co-Occurring Mental with Substance Abuse Issues, Seniors/Older Adult Services, Specialized in Hearing Impaired Clients, Spanish Services, Native American Or Alaska Native Language Services, Other Language Programs
    Payment Options: Self Pay (Out of Pocket), Medicare Coverage, State Financed Insurance besides Medicaid, Private or Personal Health Insurance, Accepts Military Insurance (E.G., Va, Tricare)