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Statistics
- Methamphetamine
led to 10,447 visits to emergency departments in 1999, down
from a peak of 17,665 in 1994.
- Methamphetamine
contributed to nearly 500 deaths in 1998, the last year
for which data are available.
- Approximately
8% of high school seniors surveyed in 2000 had used methamphetamine
at least once in their lives. An unknown number of teenaged
users may have dropped out of school before reaching senior
year.
- Meth
lab seizures have gone up 577% nationally since 1995.
- Meth
arrests have gone up 300% nationally since 1993.
- It
costs government an average of $2,000 to clean up a methamphetamine
lab.
- Methamphetamine's
high lasts from 6 to 12 hours, and 50% of the drug is removed
from the body in 12 hours. Cocaine's high lasts from 20
to 30 minutes, and 50% of the drug is removed from the body
in 1 hour.
- Methamphetamine's
street value is approximately $3,000 per pound (about the
size of a brick), while the price of cocaine is roughly
$11,000 per pound.
- The
Office of National Drug Control Policy determined that every
dollar spent on treatment resulted in a $7.46 reduction
in lost productivity and crime-related spending. This estimate
does not include the costs of providing medical care.
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