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Residential Long Term Drug Rehab Programs category listings in Franconia, Pennsylvania:
Valley Forge Medical Ctr and Hosptial (10.8 miles from Franconia, Pennsylvania)
Valley Forge Medical Ctr and Hosptial is located at:
1033 West Germantown Pike Norristown, PA. 19403 610-539-8500
Treatment Services: Substance Abuse Treatment Services, Methadone Detoxification, Hospital Inpatient, Residential Short-Term Treatment (30 Days Or Less), Residential Long-Term Treatment (More Than 30 Days), Women, Men, Spanish Payment Options: Self Payment, Medicaid, Medicare, State Financed Insurance (Other Than Medicaid), Private Health Insurance
Eagleville Hospital (11.5 miles from Franconia, Pennsylvania)
Eagleville Hospital is located at:
Treatment Services: Substance Abuse Treatment Services, Methadone Detoxification, Hospital Inpatient, Residential Short-Term Treatment (30 Days Or Less), Residential Long-Term Treatment (More Than 30 Days), Persons With Co-Occurring Mental And Substance Abuse Disorders, Seniors/Older Adults, Women, Men, Criminal Justice Clients, ASL Or Other Assistance For Hearing Impaired, Spanish, Other Languages Payment Options: Self Payment, Medicaid, Medicare, State Financed Insurance (Other Than Medicaid), Private Health Insurance, Military Insurance (E.G., Va, Tricare)
8% of the twelfth grade males in South Dakota admitted to using meth one or more times.
When a drug user initially takes meth the drug sends a message to the pleasure center in their brain. They will feel alert, full of energy and self-confident because their brain is releasing dopamine - a brain chemical that carries messages between brain cells.
White phosphorus with sodium hydroxide can produce poisonous phosphine gas, usually as a result of overheating red phosphorus, plus white phosphorus can autoignite and blow up the meth lab. In addition to phosphine and phosphorus, various hazardous vapors may be associated with a meth lab, such as chloroform, ether, acetone, ammonia, hydrochloric acid, methylamine, iodine, hydroiodic acid, lithium or sodium, mercury, and hydrogen gas.
Drug users began injecting amphetamines similar to meth during the 60s in order to achieve a more intense "high."
Some meth addicts feel the sensation of bugs crawling under their skin. Doctors have labeled this formication but meth users typically call it crank bugs.