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Drug Rehab Programs That Offer Hospital Inpatient Services category listings in Homestead, Iowa:
University of Iowa Hospitals Clinics (17.5 miles from Homestead, Iowa)
University of Iowa Hospitals Clinics is located at:
200 Hawkins Drive Iowa City, IA. 52242 319-356-1616
Treatment Services: Hospital Inpatient, Outpatient, Persons With Co-Occurring Mental And Substance Abuse Disorders, ASL Or Other Assistance For Hearing Impaired, Spanish Payment Options: Self Payment, Medicaid, Medicare, State Financed Insurance (Other Than Medicaid), Private Health Insurance, Military Insurance (E.G., Va, Tricare)
Mercy Hospital (18.4 miles from Homestead, Iowa)
Mercy Hospital is located at:
500 East Market Street Iowa City, IA. 52245 319-339-0300
Treatment Services: Hospital Inpatient, ASL Or Other Assistance For Hearing Impaired Payment Options: Self Payment, Medicaid, Medicare, Private Health Insurance, Military Insurance (E.G., Va, Tricare)
Unity Point St. Lukes (20.3 miles from Homestead, Iowa)
Unity Point St. Lukes is located at:
1026 An Avenue NE Cedar Rapids, IA. 52402 319-369-7211
Treatment Services: Hospital Inpatient, Outpatient, Seniors/Older Adults, ASL Or Other Assistance For Hearing Impaired Payment Options: Self Payment, Medicaid, Medicare, Private Health Insurance, Military Insurance (E.G., Va, Tricare)
One-Pot or Shake and Bake is a method for cooking meth. This method of cooking meth creates low quality and small quantities of the drug. Cooks using the method are typically cooking meth for personal use.
Recent brain imaging scans on meth users found that abuse of this drug can cause significant injury to the users brain. While on meth, key brain chemicals become depleted and the nerve cells that create them become damaged.
The street drug meth is closely related chemically to amphetamines, but the central nervous system effects of meth are more intense.
When the drug user takes meth it releases dopamine rapidly in reward regions of their brain producing the intense euphoria, or rush, that many users feel after snorting, smoking, or injecting the drug.
Signs of meth use include burned aluminum foil or light bulbs that have been converted to smoking devices.