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  • Drug Overdose Facts
  • In 2008, nearly 15 percent of Americans had tried cocaine, with 6 percent having tried it by their senior year of high school.
  • 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.
  • Cocaine is generally not taken by mouth for recreational purposes, and dangerous reactions, including death, have occurred in people who swallow the drug to avoid police detection or border authorities.
  • According to data that has been compiled from the National Vital Statistics System, drug poisoning incidents have accounted for tens of thousands of unintentional poisoning deaths in the United States.
  • About half of the women who are opiate dependent also have anemia, heart disease, diabetes, pneumonia, or hepatitis during pregnancy and childbirth.
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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 culturally acceptable, 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 St. Helens, Oregon: