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Drug Rehab Programs For Adolescents category listings in Ocean Grove, New Jersey:
Wall Youth Center and (3.5 miles from Ocean Grove, New Jersey)
Wall Youth Center and is located at:
1824 South M Street Belmar, NJ. 7719 732-681-1375
Treatment Services: Substance Abuse Treatment Services, Outpatient, Adolescents, Women, Men, Criminal Justice Clients Payment Options: Self Payment, Sliding Fee Scale (Fee Is Based On Income And Other Factors)
Jersey Shore Medical Center (4 miles from Ocean Grove, New Jersey)
Jersey Shore Medical Center is located at:
Treatment Services: Substance Abuse Treatment Services, Outpatient, Adolescents Payment Options: Self Payment, Medicaid, Medicare, Private Health Insurance, Military Insurance (E.G., Va, Tricare), Sliding Fee Scale (Fee Is Based On Income And Other Factors)
Frank Murano LCSW LCADC (6.9 miles from Ocean Grove, New Jersey)
Frank Murano LCSW LCADC is located at:
2517 Highway 35 Manasquan, NJ. 8736 732-530-0008
Treatment Services: Substance Abuse Treatment Services, Outpatient, Adolescents, Persons With Co-Occurring Mental And Substance Abuse Disorders, Women, Men, Dui/Dwi Offenders, Criminal Justice Clients Payment Options: Self Payment, State Financed Insurance (Other Than Medicaid), Private Health Insurance, Sliding Fee Scale (Fee Is Based On Income And Other Factors)
Research has indicated that methamphetamine abusers have a significantly heightened risk of heart attacks and strokes because of this damage. Scientists who examined data from more than 3 million Texas hospital patients ages 18 to 44 found a link between heart attack and amphetamine use and reported it in 2008 in the journal Drug and Alcohol Dependence.
By 2004 the supply of meth cooked in super labs and smuggled into the U.S. was increased by Mexican drug cartels.
The longer a person abuses meth, the more they need, even to the point of depriving themselves of basic needs such as food and sleep, in order to keep administering the drug to feed their addiction.
Crystal methamphetamine has also been associated with a large percentage of patients diagnosed with HIV within the past ten years.
Some of the physical consequences of crystal meth use for the cardiovascular system are irreversible, even if abusers manage to eventually kick the habit. Blood vessel damage in the brain has been observed among former users even years after they stopped taking the drug. Since scientists cannot yet offer any way to reduce the damage, long-term risks for stroke for these people remain higher than normal.