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Meth growing concern
 
Methamphetamine is the illicit drug that takes the largest expansion in the United States.
In 2004, there were 10,015 methamphetamine lab seizures in United States.
Methamphetamine have broken apart and split a huge amount of families.

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

Methamphetamine has destroyed several families, relationships and lives in the country. There are still well over 1 million individuals 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 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
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Methamphetamine overview in United States

Overall usage: The 1998 National Household Survey on Drug Abuse approximated that 4.7 million Americans tried methamphetamine in their life. This figure demonstrates a marked rose from the 1994 estimate of 3.8 million.

According to the Drug Abuse Warning Network (DAWN), methamphetamine-related emergency department admissions more than tripled between 1991 and 1994, increasing from roughly 4,900 to 17,700. Possibly caused by a shortage of methamphetamine between 1995 and 1996, there was a decrease in incidents between those years before rising to 17,154 in 1997. Between 1993 and 1995, episodes rose in nine of the twenty-one metropolitan regions surveyed by DAWN. The amount of methamphetamine-related episodes more than doubled in Atlanta, Dallas, Denver, Minneapolis, and St. Louis. Likewise, treatment providers in California, Oregon, Georgia, Arizona, and North Carolina report important increases in the number of clients entering treatment with methamphetamine issues. The director of one clinic in Arizona reported that 7080% of its patients are meth abusers.

Important numbers of American youth engage in heavy meth consumption and these numbers continue to increase. Causing damage to property and causing injury to themselves are among the most usual problems related with meth use. Tolerance for meth can occurs with chronic consumption. In an effort to intensify the desired effects, individuals will take elevated doses more often. In several instances, meth abusers go without food and sleep while indulging in a form of binging known as a “run,” injecting as much as a gram every two to three hours over a several day period. This will last until the individual runs out of the drug or is too disoriented to continue.

Chronic meth abuse can cause inflammation of the heart lining and progressive social and occupational deterioration. Psychotic symptoms can occasionally persist for months or years after consumption has ceased.
   

Foetal exposure to meth is an important issue in the United States. Extensive study has demonstrated that abusing meth during pregnancy might result in increased rates of premature delivery, abnormal reflexes and extreme irritability. Congenital deformities have also been related to meth abuse during pregnancy. A potential harm to meth users is the possibility of lead poisoning. Lead acetate is frequently used as a reagent in illicit meth manufacture.
   

Statistics reveal that between 1998 and 2002, fatalities from methamphetamine overdoses rose 125%. Between 1998 and 2000, meth related emergency admissions doubled. In the last few years, the consumption of this drug has increased dramatically in teenagers from 12 to 17 years old. The internet has hundreds of web sites that give the recipes and places to buy ingredients for producing the drug. Toxic ingredients, like battery acid and drain cleaner are frequently used to produce meth (NCADI).


Use among youth: The 1999 Monitoring the Future survey asked twelfth graders about the use of crystal methamphetamine and discovered that use has been increasing since 1990, peaking in 1998 before leveling off in 1999. At this moment, 4.8% of high school seniors used the drug in their lifetime (compared to 2.7% in 1990), and 1.9% used the drug within the past year (compared to 1.3% in 1990). In regions like the Midwest, where meth is readily available, meth abuse among teens is much more usual. For example, an expert related with Juvenile Court Services in Marshall County, Iowa, approximated in 1998 that one-third of the 1,600 students at Marshalltown High School had tried methamphetamine. Partnership for a Drug-Free America (PDFA) 1997 studies discovered that the majority of teenagers in the United States do not see great risk in trying meth and that teen use of meth is now comparable to the national level of cocaine use among teens. In answer to these findings and another PDFA study demonstrating that parents believe that children understand the dangers of meth use, the PDFA launched, on June 17, 1998, a national multimedia campaign targeting meth users as a part of a $196 million anti-drug media campaign coordinated by the Office of National Drug Control Policy.

Availability

Because meth production and trafficking for a period of time were concentrated mainly in the West and Southwest United States, especially California, Arizona, Utah, and Texas, availability and abuse were high in those areas. Nonetheless, the expansion of Mexico-based meth traffickers and the growth of independent U.S.-based laboratories have dramatically raised the availability and abuse of meth in the Pacific Northwest, Midwest, and some portions of the Southeast, particularly Georgia, Tennessee, and the surrounding states. There is also evidence that meth production and accessibility is beginning to spread to Mid-Atlantic States, like Virginia, and even as far north as New England. In 1998, meth labs were, for the first time, found in New Jersey, Delaware, and Massachusetts.

Sources

Historically, suppliers of methamphetamine in the country were outlaw motorcycle gangs and other independent trafficking organizations. Even though motorcycle gangs still produce meth and control a share of the market, Mexico-based trafficking groups entered the illicit methamphetamine market in 1995 and now dominate the trade. With their ability to obtain wholesale (multi-ton) amounts of precursor chemicals on the international market, their access to already established smuggling and distribution networks, and their control over laboratories able of large-scale production and distribution of methamphetamine, these criminal groups from Mexico now dominate wholesale meth trafficking in the United States.

Over the last few years, these organizations revolutionized the production and distribution of methamphetamine by operating "super labs" that can produce unprecedented quantities of high-purity methamphetamine. Each such lab is able of producing 10 pounds or more per manufacturing cycle. Most of the methamphetamine made and distributed by Mexico-based groups is produced within the United States, particularly in California and other Western states. Lately, there has been a dramatic increase in the amount of methamphetamine laboratories operating in certain states, such as Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Arkansas. The increase in laboratory seizures in these states does not reflect a concerted effort by important traffickers to shift production from sites in California. Instead, it reflects the increasing effort by local entrepreneurs, who operate on the periphery of the methamphetamine market, to exploit the expanding demand for the substance by producing smaller amounts of the drug in less complex laboratories.

Trafficking

The principal points of entry into the United States for methamphetamine and amphetamine produced in Mexico are California ports-of-entry, especially San Ysidro. Nonetheless, south Texas ports-of-entry, especially Laredo, are experiencing increased smuggling activity. The most usual way of transporting methamphetamine and amphetamine is via cars, with pickup trucks and 4-wheel drive vehicles also being used.

According to the El Paso Intelligence Center, the methamphetamine confiscated yearly in transit from Mexico to the United States has increased dramatically since 1992. Authorities seized 560 kilograms of methamphetamine along the border in 1998, compared with only 6.5 kilograms in 1992. To expand their distribution systems, Mexico-based traffickers use methods like exploiting the presence of a large amount of honest Mexican-American workers in the meat processing plants of the Midwest and in the forest industry in the Northwest to insert surrogates into many U.S. communities, explaining why meth has become a major problem in states like Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, and Washington.

Source: U.S. Department of Justice

 

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