Online Herion Resources


NIDA Heroin InfoFacts


Links
usnodrugs.com
interventionspecialists.com
heroinaddiction2.com
drugrehabcenters.org
drugrehabs.org
addictionwithdrawal.com


Heroin


Heroin addicts are individuals who have a very powerful stigma attached to them, "heroin junkie". Is this really the case though? With the purity level of heroin being so high many users are snorting heroin as if it was cocaine. Gone are the needles and the high risk of contracting diseases. Many of today's youth are experimenting with heroin. No longer is heron associated solely with those living in the street and shooting up. Heroin use has spread into the suburbs of America and is putting down roots. From a 1999 National Household Survey on Drug Abuse it was estimated that there were 149,000 new heroin users in 1998 and that nearly 80 percent of them were under the age of 26. Why would so many of our youth experiment with this deadly drug? The answer is because heroin is not just for junkies anymore. Heroin use is spread over America's entire social spectrum, from the very rich to the extreme poor.

Heroin comes from the opium poppy plants. It is a derivative of morphine, which is extracted from the seed pod of the poppy. In its purest state heroin is usually a white powder, but it may also be light to dark brown in color. Typically, heroin is cut with several other substances to produce more profits for those selling it. The term "cut" means to add other substances to the drug, in turn making more product but less of the actual drug. Typical substances that heroin might be cut with include sugar, starch, powdered milk, quinine, and strychnine.

Included in this website is a vast amount of information regarding several areas of heron. Information if provided on what heroin is, heroin addiction, heroin effects, the history of heroin, pictures of heroin, the side effects cased by heroin use, statistics on heroin, heroin addiction treatment, as well as heroin withdrawal. Careful consideration has been taken to create a well rounded view of all the options available to those who wish to end their addiction to heroin. In addition, an extensive search of pictures were gathered to provide you with accurate representations of what the actual drug itself looks like.

We hope that the information that we are able to provide to you will help in saving your life, or that of someone you care about. Heroin is a drug with severe and drastic consequences. It is important to be well informed on all aspects of heroin to be able to save a life; remember, knowledge is power.



 March 22, 2004
Front line in the fight against heroin addiction
SEABROOK - Paramedic Kevin Janvrin has found them parked in cars outside local stores, in ...
 March 22, 2004
Escaping the clutches of heroin addiction
SOMERSWORTH - Terri Provencher, a 39-year-old mother and recovering heroin addict from Seabrook, has tried ...
 March 22, 2004
The fight against drug addiction
Boston Mayor Thomas Menino has introduced a program that would fund acupuncture detoxification and prescription ...
 April 3, 2003
Woman sentenced for selling heroin like drug
A woman who admitted to selling large amounts of a heroin-like drug to undercover federal ...
 April 3, 2003
Doctors can prescribe new heroin addiction treatment
Heroin and painkiller addicts can now get an anti-addiction drug from their regular doctors, instead ...
 April 3, 2003
Officers discover $24m heroin
CUSTOMS officers have seized a massive 24 kilogram heroin shipment, valued at $24 million, hidden ...
 April 3, 2003
Greedy Drug Barons Push Rogue Heroin
GREEDY drug dealers who are selling rogue heroin have sparked a major health alert among ...
 February 15, 2003
Parents confront heroin nightmare
By David Wecker Post staff reporter In an extraordinary meeting marked with heated accusations, frustration and ...
 February 8, 2003
Methadone Overdose, Deaths on Rise in U.S.
Throughout the United States, overdoses and deaths from methadone, a drug used to relieve chronic ...
Heroin accounts for the majority of the illicit opiate abuse in America.

As heroin leaves the brain and body, users experience withdrawal symptoms, which are often described as feeling like a severe case of flu.

Heroin usually appears as a white or brown powder.

Withdrawal symptoms from heroin begin within 24 hours after last use and may last up to 7-10 days.


usnodrugs.com
interventionspecialists.com
heroinaddiction2.com
drugrehabcenters.org
drugrehabs.org
addictionwithdrawal.com