New Mexico Meth
addiction treatment
1-866-635-1001

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New Mexico drug rehab
 

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

Methamphetamine has destroyed many families, relationships and lives in New Mexico. There are still well over 1 million people in the United States who need rehabilitation for methamphetamine addiction.

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

Drug Rehab Services philosophy is to give 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!
Call one of our counselor today!
1-866-635-1001
Online consultation

Methamphetamine overview in New Mexico

Methamphetamine abuse is uptrending in the state of New Mexico as evidenced by the rise in the amount of people seeking addiction treatment. Addiction treatment providers throughout New Mexico report a significant increase in the abuse of methamphetamine. According to TEDS, methamphetamine addiction treatment admissions more than doubled from 92 admissions in the year of 1993 to 210 in 1998. However, a disparity in data reporting for 1998 admissions to addiction treatment programs occurred and resulted in underreporting.

The low cost and long-lasting euphoric effects of meth have attracted new users to the drug. There also is a perception that meth is not as dangerous as cocaine or heroin and will not result in long-term addiction. As a result, abusers of other drugs--particularly crack --have started to use meth. The number of youth who have reported using meth is an additional concern. According to 1999 YRBS data, 15.3%t of New Mexico high school student respondents reported lifetime meth use.

There are serious physical and psychological effects related to meth abuse. Common effects of methamphetamine abuse include hyperthermia, convulsions, and cardiovascular collapse. Psychological paranoia related with meth may lead to homicidal and suicidal tendencies. Long-term effects of meth abuse include kidney complications, lung disorders, brain damage, liver damage, and blood clots.

Meth treatment admissions per 100,000 citizens (2003): 8

During 2003, 155 residents sought treatment for meth addiction, or approximately 4.0% of all individuals seeking drug abuse treatment. This is a raise from 2002, when only 71 individuals sought treatment for meth abuse, but a decrease from the late 1990s when over 200 individuals sought treatment each year.

New Mexico is an important transhipment region for drugs, including methamphetamine, from Mexico. Currently, the trafficking of meth is a bigger problem for state drug enforcement authorities than is meth abuse.

Even though most of the meth seized within the state originates in Mexico, local production of drug remains elevated.  During 2004, certain 120 labs and about 60 kilograms of meth were seized by DEA, state and local authorities, a staggering quantity for a state with a population of less than 2 million.

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 per month, and requires that buyers provide identification and sign a sales log. Also, sellers must keep these substances behind the counter or in a locked case and register on-line with the U.S. Attorney General.

 

Help is just a phone call away!
Call one of our counselor today!
1-866-635-1001
Online consultation

 

 
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