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Florida meth treatment

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

Methamphetamine has destroyed a lot of families, relationships and lives in the state of Florida. 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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Methamphetamine overview in Florida

Methamphetamine poses a major and increasing threat in the state of Florida and is a serious public health problem in some areas of Florida. The drug is frequently available and abused in rural areas and is increasingly available and abused in suburban and metropolitan areas of Florida. Meth production, distribution, and abuse often are associated with violent crime. In central parts of Florida, an area that historically has had a significant meth problem, the availability and abuse of the drug have spread outward from Polk County. Most of the methamphetamine available in that area is produced in high volume labs in the state California, Mexico, and southwestern states of the U.S using the hydriodic acid/red phosphorus method.

Methamphetamine can be snorted, smoked, or injected and often is used in conjunction with other drugs, particularly pharmaceuticals. Drug addiction treatment providers report that most meth abusers in the state of Florida snort the drug, at least initially. However, the harsh chemicals used to produce meth damage the nasal passages, forcing abusers to resort to smoking or injecting the drug. According to federal, state, and local law enforcement officials, many meth abusers simultaneously use pharmaceuticals including benzodiazepines (Xanax and Valium), oxycodones (OxyContin and Percocet), and hydrocodones (Lorcet and Lortab), many of which they can obtained illegally. State and local law enforcement officials in the state of Florida report that most individuals arrested for possession of meth also possess other drugs, including illegally obtained pharmaceuticals, at the time that those individuals were arrested.

The fast growing use of meth.

Use of methamphetamine, a powerful and addictive stimulant, is uncontrolled and spreading across the nation, reaching levels that have been called "epidemic."

In areas where it hasn't been an issue in the past, it may seem to have come out of nowhere, but methamphetamine has been a fixture of the American drug scene for a long time.

A lot of lately news coverage has focused on the impact of methamphetamine among gay men, who are using it, having risky sex, and possibly fanning the flames of HIV/AIDS. Michael Siever, PhD, director of the Stonewall Project, a San Francisco outreach program for gay men, admits the drug is nothing new in his neighborhood.

"I've been doing work on methamphetamine in the homosexual community for about 15 years now," he says to WebMD.

From War to Prison

Like numerous other drugs that are now illicit, methamphetamine got off to a legitimate start. During World War II, soldiers from all nations were given the drug to help keep them in fighting form. Throughout the 1950s, physicians widely prescribed methamphetamine as a diet pill and antidepressant, known by the brand name Methedrine.

Currently, there are many slang terms for it, including "ice," "crystal," "glass," "Tina," "crank," and just "meth."  Even though meth is occasionally sold in pill form, it mainly comes in the form of a white powder or crystals. It can be swallowed, snorted, injected, or as is becoming more usual, smoked.

When smoked or injected, meth brings on an instant and intense euphoric rush that lasts numerous minutes. Taken other ways, the high comes on more gradually, producing an important feeling of well-being, increased alertness and activity, and decreased appetite, which lasts up to 12 hours. The effects of meth are frequently compared to those of cocaine.

Meth works by flooding the brain with massive quantities of dopamine, a neurochemical usually released in small amounts in response to something pleasurable. It also increases blood pressure, heart rate, respiration, and body temperature.

The Crash

Obviously, the high comes at a cost. When the meth wears off, dopamine in the brain is depleted, and abusers are left feeling depressed, fatigued, and irritable. After important use, some individuals become psychotic and paranoid, and they may experience a state of "anhedonia," or an inability to feel any pleasure, which makes them crave the drug.

It takes the brain months and months to recover. Research on rats and monkeys has demonstrated that methamphetamine use may permanently damage the brain cells that make dopamine, as well as those that make serotonin, another brain chemical involved in pleasure.

Roots in California, Growing Nationwide

In the 1960s, recreational drug users, especially heroin addicts in California, started injecting Desoxyn, a prescription form of methamphetamine.
Nonetheless, shortly after, the black market for meth took root in San Francisco. Motorcycle gangs, notably the Hell's Angels, began to manufacture and distribute the drug. It followed where they went, which signifies that for decades meth use was limited to California, some other regions of the West, and a few pockets in the Midwest.

Meth treatment admissions per 100,000 citizens (2003): 6

In recent years, methamphetamine has become an important concern among drug enforcement authorities in Florida. Even though the majority of meth in circulation in the state is still provided by Mexican traffickers, local manufacture is increasing. During 2004, a record 276 labs were seized by DEA, state and local authorities, in comparison to 133 in 2002 and only 15 in 2000. Florida has also experienced a similar increase in the amount of individuals seeking treatment for meth addiction: from 420 in 2000 to 1,062 in 2004. Nonetheless, the latter figure only represents 1.6% of the persons admitted for drug treatment.

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. Also, 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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