Baltimore Medical Marijuana

De Les Feux de l'Amour - Le site Wik'Y&R du projet Y&R.

Marijuana Delivery However, drug rehabs are going west to help a new wave of heroin addicts cropping up in cities such as Denver.Drug rehabs need look no further than Tom Gorman, director of the Rocky Mountain High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area program, to find out how bad the heroin problem has become in Denver. It's not like a manufactured pill that remains consistent no matter where or how it is purchased.

This move from synthetic opioids to heroin is a trend that has drug rehabs concerned. Recently, pain pill manufacturers have made it more difficult to abuse prescription drugs by making more time released capsules with special coatings that are hard to abuse. Also, many pain management clinics across the United States are being forced to shut their doors. These closings have driven up the street price of prescription pain pills. Substance Abuse Treatment Centers and law enforcement agencies expect the trend for drug addicts to move from prescription opioids to heroin will only increase, due to the cheap price of Mexican black tar.Bruce Mendelson, senior data consultant at the Denver Office of Drug Stratedy, reports that new heroin users are typically under age 35, white non-Hispanics who prefer smoking the drug rather than injecting it.It's not difficult for young people in Denver to find heroin, either. A recent report by Rick Sallinger, of CBS News Channel 4, revealed the homeless sell plenty of the drug. He went undercover and approached random homeless people looking for black tar heroin, and repeatedly found what he was supposedly looking for. Mayor Michael Hancock wants to sign an ordinance banning urban camping to prevent panhandlers from their secret drug dealings. He's getting a lot of resistance, however, from local agencies who want to protect the rights of the homeless. It's a sticky situation for the mayor.Mayor Hancock knows full well that the most abused drugs in Denver remain alcohol and marijuana. However, heroin's climb in popularity does not seem to be declining. In 2010 heroin overdoses ranked third behind marijuana and cocaine for emergency room visits. In 2011, about 18 percent of all Denver residents who were admitted to substance abuse treatment centers were opiate addicts, according to the Colorado Health Foundation. Heroin and opiates are the third leading cause of death for alcohol or drug related fatalities in Denver.

Statistics from drug rehabs in Colorado also reflect heroin's popularity.. Marc Condoljani, associate director of community intervention programs at the Colorado division of behavioral health said, "We had 1,676 heroin admissions in 2003, and then the numbers dipped for a few years, but then they went up again. In 2010, we had 1,755 treatment admissions for heroin. In the other-opiates category, we had 541 people admitted for treatment in 2003, and in 2010, there were 1,715. That's over a threefold increase. The alarming part, to me, is that people who are dependent on those prescription usually look for alternatives, and that means heroin."Drug rehabs are taking notice of the problem in Denver. They are preparing for a new influx of substance abuse treatment patients who are addicted to the dangerous Mexican black tar heroin that infects the city's streets and aims to kill opiate addicts.

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