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New Mexico
Drug and Alcohol Rehabs
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New Mexico
Addiction Rehab
Information
If you are looking to
overcome chemical
dependency - be it drugs or
alcohol - in the state of
New Mexico, Drug and Alcohol
Rehab Reference Center is
here to provide support and
advice at no cost or
obligation to you. Fill out
the form to the right and
we'll contact you to answer
your questions whether it's
for yourself or someone you
know.
The state of New Mexico
provides several drug and
alcohol rehab programs for
adults and adolescents. With
so many choices, one would
think it wouldn't be too
difficult to select a
program, but you would be
wrong. There are just about
as many drug rehab treatment
philosophies as there are
drug and alcohol rehab
centers.
Some programs do not offer
drug detox programs and thus
refer out for this addiction
treatment service. Others
believe addiction is a
disease forever leaving the
addict in a problem
stripping them of their
freedom of choice to
overcome addiction and
sentencing them to a
lifetime of alcoholism or
being a drug addict and
thus, opening the door to
relapse.
Another aspect of selecting
a drug rehab treatment
program is whether the user
should attend a program
close to home or not.
Sometimes selecting a
program far from home is key
to success especially when
choosing long-term inpatient
treatment programs. This
provides a "trigger-free"
environment which distances
the individual from negative
reinforcements for their
addictive behavior.
Drug and Alcohol Rehab
Reference Center's staff is
experienced in matching drug
rehab needs with the proper
facility. Not every New
Mexico
drug rehab program meets
every individual's needs.
Fill out the form to the
right to set up the time
best to contact you.
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New Mexico Drug Use
Information
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According
to the DEA (U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration),
there is ample availability of crack cocaine
throughout New Mexico. In smaller municipalities,
such as Hobbs and Silver City, crack cocaine use and
distribution is at a level that is considered
dangerous to the quality of life. The majority of
the crack available comes from cocaine HCl supplied
by MDTOs to local crack distributors who then
convert the powder cocaine into crack. Local gangs
are the primary distributors of crack cocaine in
urban areas posing a threat to school children.
Street level distributors can be found in all social
and economic layers of the community. Of special
concern is the high level of violence associated
with crack cocaine traffickers.
Black tar heroin has long been available in this
region from sources in the Mexican states of Sinaloa,
Michoacan, and Nayarit. Heroin is most commonly
smuggled in secret compartments in private vehicles
and concealed on persons. In Albuquerque, Mexican
black tar heroin is the most readily available and
widely abused. The heroin is usually carried across
the border by couriers. Northern New Mexico has a
high availability of Mexican black tar heroin and is
a major problem for local law enforcement agencies.
Heroin availability has shown a steady increase over
the past five years as evidenced by the increase in
kilogram seizures and a steady decrease in price.
Methamphetamine poses a multi-pronged threat in this
region. It is available in multi-kilogram
quantities. While clandestine lab seizures in New
Mexico have dropped precipitously over the last
year, referral seizures involving Mexican produced
methamphetamine have risen dramatically at Border
Patrol Checkpoints and highway interdiction stops.
The majority of methamphetamine seized originates in
Mexico, but arrives in New Mexico from distributors
in Los Angeles, CA and Phoenix, AZ operating as part
of larger Mexican poly-drug trafficking
organizations. Methamphetamine investigations are
especially prevalent in the area known as the Four
Corners region where the states of Arizona,
Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah meet to form a common
border and along the eastern New Mexico/Texas
border. Popular in the area are small, clandestine
laboratories set up in remote, rural locations.
The diversion of prescription drugs continues to be
a significant enforcement issue. Illegal or improper
prescription practices are the primary source for
illegally obtained prescription drugs, primarily in
the oxycodone/hydrocodone families. Interdiction
efforts also indicate that prescription drug
smuggling from Mexico, where these drugs can be sold
over the counter, contributes to the illegal
distribution of prescription medications.
Compounding this issue is the state's severe
shortage of qualified medical personnel forcing
state authorities to grant prescriptive authority to
practitioners not licensed in other states. New
Mexico has recently become one of the few states to
grant prescribing authority to psychologists who
have no medical or pharmaceutical training. |
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Call now for Immediate
Assistance (877) 502-1065 |
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CALL
NOW for
Immediate Assistance
(877) 502-1065 |
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All calls are confidential
at no cost or
obligation to you. Or, fill
out the form below and tell us
when you want one of our
trained counselors to
contact you. |
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Drug Related Statistics from the White
House Drug Policy for the State of New Meixco:
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►Marijuana is the most readily
available drug in New Mexico. The majority of the marijuana found in the state
is produced in Mexico. |
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►MDMA, ketamine, LSD and GHB are
all available throughout New Mexico, primarily in Albuquerque and Santa Fe. Rave
parties are frequently held in the area, often in remote locations on U.S.
Forest Service lands. |
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►a 2005 survey of New Mexico
high school students, approximately 26% of surveyed students reported being
current users of marijuana (used within the past month) |
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►During 2006, there were 10,397
admissions to drug/alcohol treatment in New Mexico. |
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►approximately 39,000 New Mexico
citizens reported needing but not receiving
treatment for illicit drug use within the past year. |
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No
parent wants to believe that
they raised an addict or an
alcoholic. Emotions can
range from apathy to anger
and most feel powerless.
But something can be done.
The worst thing to do is
nothing. Do not wait until
it is too late.
Contact Drug and Alcohol
Rehab Reference Center to
see what your options are.
There is no cost and no
obligation to speak to a
trained counselor.
-
Confidential Assessment |
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Drug Statistics and Trends
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In 2008, 802,000 Americans
age 12 and older had abused
LSD at least once in the
previous year.
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National Institute on Drub
Abuse |
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Intervention Might be Necessary
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When life has become all but
unbearable, not knowing if the next
call is from the police notifying
you that someone you love is in
jail, or worse, dead, then you need
to go into action. Do do nothing is
the wrong thing to do.
Of course, some addicts are ready to
accept help, but if in your
situation the person is in denial,
then intervention may be necessary.
Recommendations based on successful
interventions include:
» Choose an appropriate drug rehab
program before the intervention and
ensure that there is immediate
availability. Workable rehab
prevents relapse. This is why we
offer our services.
» Decide who should take part in the
intervention. This should include
family members or friends that the
addict knows well and respects, not
those who will only create hostility
because of their own anger towards
the addict.
» Help show the addict the very real
reasons why they must get help. Make
the reasons applicable to their
situation. Give examples of the
issues which currently exist and
will most likely exist if they don't
get help. These issues should be
significant and devastating to the
addict. Get them to talk about them
and see how it is that way.
» The best time to do an
intervention is after a major event
such as incarceration,
hospitalization, job loss or their
significant other leaving.
» Always do an intervention when the
addict is sober.
» Never use sympathy with the
addict; instead, the intervention
should be done with concern, love
and directness. It must be
unwavering in communicating that the
family will no longer standby and
watch the addict kill themselves.
» Force the addict out of their
"addiction comfort zone." An addict
who is being provided money, a car
and a place to freely live and does
drugs is not likely to quit. Let the
addict know they will no longer
receive this type of assistance.
Take away any "help" that is
actually killing the person.
» Arrange to have a staff member
from the chosen rehab available if
possible, if there is no
interventionist.
» Before you begin the intervention,
have the addict's bags packed and
travel arrangements made. There
should be no delay. Give no option
of backing out once the addict
agrees to help. |
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