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  • Drug Overdose Facts
  • 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.
  • Annual rates of hallucinogen use in the U.S. have increased significantly among high school seniors in both annual (2.6 percent) and past-month (0.8 percent) use of LSD.
  • Because there are at least a quarter million people receiving methadone, it is unknown how many of these individuals may be addicted to the drug.
  • As of 2005, the most significant predictors of whether an individual would complete drug rehab or transfer to another program to receive further treatment included: alcohol as the primary substance of abuse, less than daily use at admission, being over age 40, having 12 or more years of education, being White, referral to treatment by the criminal justice system, and being employed.
  • Cocaine users are at risk of heart attacks, respiratory failure, strokes, seizures, abdominal pain, and nausea.
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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 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 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 Wolverine, Michigan:

  • Bear River Health at Walloon Lake
    15.3 miles from Wolverine, Michigan
    Bear River Health at Walloon Lake is a Drug Rehabilitation Program that is located at:

    2594 Springvale Road
    Boyne Falls, MI. 49713
    231-532-2822

    Treatment Services: Substance Abuse Programs, Detoxification, Outpatient Treatment, Residential Short-Term Treatment that is 30 days or less, Residential Long-Term Treatment that is 30 days or longer, Co-Occurring Mental with Substance Abuse Issues, Women Only, Men Only, Dui/Dwi Offender Programs, Criminal Justice Client Programs, Specialized in Hearing Impaired Clients, Native American Or Alaska Native Language Services
    Payment Options: Self Pay (Out of Pocket), Private or Personal Health Insurance
  • Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa
    18 miles from Wolverine, Michigan
    Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa is a Drug Addiction Treatment Program that is located at:

    1250 Lears Road
    Petoskey, MI. 49770
    231-242-1640

    Treatment Services: Substance Abuse Programs, Outpatient Treatment, Adolescents (18 and under), Co-Occurring Mental with Substance Abuse Issues, Women Only, Men Only, Criminal Justice Client Programs, Native American Or Alaska Native Language Services
    Payment Options: Medicaid Coverage, Medicare Coverage, State Financed Insurance besides Medicaid, Private or Personal Health Insurance, Accepts Military Insurance (E.G., Va, Tricare), Payment Assistance (based on Facility)