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Drug Rehab Programs That Offer Hospital Inpatient Services category listings in Hope Hull, Alabama:
Baptist Medical Center South (11.2 miles from Hope Hull, Alabama)
Baptist Medical Center South is located at:
4385 Narrow Lane Road Montgomery, AL. 36116 334-286-5360
Treatment Services: Hospital Inpatient, Outpatient, ASL Or Other Assistance For Hearing Impaired Payment Options: Self Payment, Medicaid, Medicare, State Financed Insurance (Other Than Medicaid), Private Health Insurance
A Nu Direction (27.2 miles from Hope Hull, Alabama)
A Nu Direction is located at:
Treatment Services: Hospital Inpatient, ASL Or Other Assistance For Hearing Impaired Payment Options: Self Payment, Medicaid, Private Health Insurance, Military Insurance (E.G., Va, Tricare)
Crenshaw Community Hospital (34.8 miles from Hope Hull, Alabama)
Crenshaw Community Hospital is located at:
101 Hospital Circle Luverne, AL. 36049 334-335-1175
Treatment Services: Hospital Inpatient, ASL Or Other Assistance For Hearing Impaired Payment Options: Self Payment, Medicaid, Medicare, State Financed Insurance (Other Than Medicaid), Private Health Insurance, Military Insurance (E.G., Va, Tricare), Payment Assistance (Check With Facility For Details)
Community Hospital (37 miles from Hope Hull, Alabama)
Community Hospital is located at:
Meth addicts often have little regard for personal hygiene. They may not brush their teeth or take showers for extended periods of time.
Drug users take meth in different ways depending on where they live and their age. In San Francisco, drug users typically inject meth. In Honolulu drug users commonly smoke meth. In Phoenix, younger drug users take pills, while older drug users snort the drug.
High intensity meth users go beyond binging on the drug, they participate in what is known as tweaking. Tweaking is when the meth user has not slept in several days and is irritable and experiencing feelings of paranoia.
In 2005 Congress passed the Combat Methamphetamine Epidemic Act as a part of the Patriot Revision Act.
Research on animals over the last 20 years shows that high doses of meth can cause damage to neuron cell-endings. Dopamine and serotonin containing neurons do not die after meth abuse, but their nerve endings ("terminals") are cut back and re-growth appears to be stunted.