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THE CHANGING FACE OF METHAMPHETAMINE ABUSE
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by Luke Catton, Narconon Arrowhead Legislative and law enforcement efforts have cut the production of local meth labs, but overall use has yet to decline due to availability of different varieties of the drug.
As methamphetamine abuse continues its scourge of the country, state and federal elected officials have worked over the last year to pass laws restricting sales of over-the-counter products containing pseudoephedrine. |
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An Associated Press (AP) story reported that the federal anti-meth law was recently amended so that states could still impose their own laws as long as they meet the minimum requirements of the federal version. This allows states such as Oklahoma, whose law went into effect more than a year ago, to keep their tighter restrictions on the amount of pills sold.
State legislators in Oregon have gone a step further and have required the cold medicines containing the meth-making ingredient to be available only by prescription. With the passage of these new laws, several state narcotics bureaus have reported the number of meth lab busts to be down by as much as 90 percent over the previous year; however the absence of home-cooked meth has not produced a decline in overall use of the drug. In fact, a different form of the drug, known commonly as ice, has become more prevalent in its place. To read the 8-article series about the results of the courses of the Narconon drug rehabilitation program go to www.narconon-news.org/results/rehab.htm |
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| KevinOwen@rehabnz.co.nz | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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