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Meth treatment in Connecticut

Drug Rehab Centers Services will help you find asistance for methamphetamine addiction and rehabilitation in the state of Connecticut. Our certified counselors will guide you and your family in this important moment in finding a meth treatment in Connecticut.

Methamphetamine has destroyed a lot of families, relationships and lives in Connecticut. There are still well over 1 million people in the United States who need rehabilitation for methamphetamine addiction.

But there is hope as many individuals with a methamphetamine addiction got their lives back after attending a meth rehab center.

Drug Rehab Services philosophy is to provide honest, caring and knowledgeable advice, support and referrals according to your unique circumstance.
Our mission is to achieve a drug-free world.
Our goal is to help drug addicts and families find a rehab.

Help is just a phone call away!
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1-877-254-3348

Methamphetamine overview in Connecticut

Meth is abused in the state of Connecticut. The number of meth-related addiction treatment admissions to publicly funded facilities has been stable since the year of 1994, according to TEDS data. Most meth abusers are teenagers and young adults who attend rave parties. Mainly, Caucasian independent dealers distribute meth in Connecticut.

How Meth is affecting the user?

Meth is a stimulant. Even in small doses, it can raise wakefulness and physical activity and suppress appetite. With chronic use, meth users may feel anxiety, confusion and insomnia as well as psychotic episodes such as paranoia, auditory hallucinations, mood disturbances and delusions (such as the sensation of insects creeping on the skin). Over time, tolerance to the drug will develop, making themeth user increase his dosage to obtain the same initial effect.

Methamphetamine has a quicker rate of addiction than several other drugs including marijuana or alcohol. Long term use can lead to psychotic behavior, hallucinations, addiction or even fatality.

Meth is frequently consumed in a "binge and crash" pattern. Users attempt to maintain the "high" by binging -- barely eating or sleeping for days at a time. Ultimately, meth users begin to "crash." At first, they become depressed and crave more methamphetamine. But these feelings soon change into lethargy, followed by a long deep sleep. Once the user awakens, the depression comes back and may last for days. At this time, the potential for suicide is elevated.

It is not uncommon for methamphetamine psychosis to last for days after the last dose is taken. There are several reports of meth users staying paranoid, delusional, apathetic, and socially withdrawn for weeks. At occasions, methamphetamine-related psychosis lasts for years, but in these cases experts believe the drug may have triggered symptoms of a pre-existing mental disorder.

Meth treatment admissions per 100,000 citizens (2003): 3

Connecticut's location on the East Coast has, so far, insulated it from the spread of the West Coast's epidemic, and methamphetamine is still an obscure issue in the state. Heroin has surpassed crack cocaine as the state's biggest drug menace. During 2003, 17,609 individuals sought treatment for a heroin addiction (or approximately 38.5% of individuals seeking substance abuse treatment); while only 114 (or approximately 0.2%) sought treatment for a meth addiction. Likewise, only two clandestine labs have been seized since 2000. In spite of the current lack of symptoms of meth abuse in the state, Connecticut is not immune to this epidemic; it takes several years before the effects of the drug can be fully measured.

Update:

The Combat Meth Act, signed by President Bush on March 9, 2006, gives minimum standards for retailers across the nation that sell substances containing ephedrine and pseudoephedrine. The law limits sales to 3.6 grams of the base ingredient (the pure ephedrine or pseudoephedrine) daily and 9 grams monthly, and requires that buyers provide identification and sign a sales log. Additionally, sellers must now keep these substances behind the counter or in a locked case and register on-line with the U.S. Attorney General.

 

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