Pennsylvania Meth
addiction treatment
1-866-635-1001

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Pennsylvania drug rehab
 

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

Methamphetamine has destroyed a lot of families, relationships and lives in Pennsylvania. There are still well over 1 million individuals in the United States who are in need of 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!
Call one of our counselor today!
1-866-635-1001
Online consultation

Methamphetamine overview in Pennsylvania

In year of 2003, there were a reported 465 drug rehab centers and addiction treatments in Pennsylvania state. These abuse centers combined to serve 37,928 clients for alcohol and/or drug addiction problems.

Meth is available in varying quantities in the state of Pennsylvania with consumption concentrated in the Philadelphia area. The major part of the meth used in the state of Pennsylvania is supplied by local traffickers who manufacture or produce it themselves and by major trafficking organizations operating in the state of California and Mexico. Intelligence indicates that these organizations transport meth into the state using a variety of methods, including private vehicles, commercial bus luggage, and packages shipped via express mail and parcel services.

Although the availability of meth in the state of Pennsylvania is relatively low compared to the midwestern and western part of the United States, investigations and reports from state and local law enforcement confirm the eastward movement of meth production into the state of Pennsylvania. Particularly, rural areas, such as the northwestern counties and Pocono Mountain areas of Pennsylvania, have been infiltrated with small, yet dangerous, methamphetamine laboratories, as numerous lab seizures have been documented by law enforcement in the past few years. The rural parts of Pennsylvania remained the most popular locations for clandestine labs due to the reduced risk of detection caused by the pungent odor of a lab as well as the likelihood of a lesser law enforcement presence. However, investigations continued to reveal that small-scale meth labs exist anywhere from residences to motel rooms in cities and towns throughout the state of Pennsylvania. These labs account for the vast majority of meth labs seized in the state of Pennsylvania and the majority of meth available in western parts of Pennsylvania, however, the production output of these labs represent only a small percentage of the meth consumed in all of Pennsylvania state.

Though not nearly as popular as heroin, cocaine, or crack , meth is attractive because of its longer lasting high and because users can easily produce their own meth with readily available recipes, precursor chemicals or ingredients, and equipment. Lab operators use various means to obtain precursor chemicals, including diversion from legitimate sources and self-production. However, precursor chemicals include commonly used household products/chemicals, such as lye, and over the counter substances, such as pseudoephedrine, most of which are readily available at retail stores.

Meth treatment admissions per 100,000 citizens (2003): 2

While heroin remains the principal drug of choice in Pennsylvania, drug enforcement authorities are increasingly concerned about the eastward spread of the meth epidemic, especially in the rural north-western corner of the state, which has become known as "the meth capital of Pennsylvania." During 2004, 460 individuals sought treatment for meth addiction, or approximately 0.5% of all individuals seeking drug abuse treatment. This is a raise from 2002, when only 229 individuals sought treatment for meth abuse. Likewise, local manufacture of the drug is increasing. During 2004 a record 106 labs were seized by DEA, state and local authorities, in comparison to 60 in 2003 and just 8 in 2000.

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
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