Uncomfortable Intervention



Heroin addiction is a serious addiction. The cheap cost and easy availability of heroin make it more appealing than prescription opioids. People who are addicted to the drug have to use it daily to avoid withdrawal. The longer that they use heroin, the more addicted they’ll become. When people develop a heroin addiction, the drug becomes the center of their lives. Things that they used to cherish lose importance. They often believe that they’ll be addicted forever, and they can’t see a way to escape. But heroin treatment can help people rebuild their lives.

What Is Heroin?
Heroin is an illicit substance that belongs to a class of drugs called opioids. These drugs are sometimes referred to as narcotics. Heroin sold on the street can have several nicknames, including smack, dope, and horse. The scientific name for heroin, which is derived from morphine, is diacetylmorphine. Morphine occurs naturally in opium, the sap inside the seed of the opium poppy plant.

People use heroin to get high because heroin affects parts of the brain that control pleasure and relaxation. The drug can also reduce coughing. Bayer actually marketed heroin as medication to treat cough in the early 1900s. That’s how the drug became popularly known as heroin. Today, drug trafficking organizations in multiple countries smuggle several different types of heroin into the United States.

Why People Abuse Heroin?
Like other opioids, heroin can relieve pain. But that’s not why most people use it. When it’s abused, heroin makes people feel peaceful, relaxed and drowsy. It can also cause short-term relief from stress, anxiety or depression.

Other opioids, such as oxycodone or hydrocodone, can be abused to achieve the same effects. However, heroin costs less than prescription opioids. The same dose of a prescription drug maybe three times as expensive as the cost of heroin on the street.

Many people abuse heroin because it is easier to abuse than other opioids. Legitimate medications require a doctor’s prescription, and many prescription drugs have chemical formulas that make them difficult to crush or melt.

People who are addicted to heroin may take the drug to prevent withdrawal rather than to get high. Heroin is more widely available today than in recent decades, according to the DEA’s 2017 National Drug Threat Assessment.

How Do People Abuse Heroin?

Snorting heroin delivers a large portion of the drug to the brain. It also gets the drug to the brain more quickly than if heroin was swallowed. Smoking heroin is one of the fastest ways to get the drug to the brain, according to the Genetic Science Learning Center.

Shooting heroin is the most dangerous way to consume the drug because the full dose of the drug makes it to the brain. Most people start by smoking or snorting heroin, and they don’t transition to IV use until they’ve been addicted for several months or years.

Effects of Heroin Addiction and Abuse

Fatal Overdose, Collapsed Veins, Abscesses, Constipation, Gastrointestinal Cramping, Liver Disease, Kidney Disease.

Heroin’s side effects may be as well-known as its positive effects. The drug is notorious for its potential to cause addiction, its painful withdrawal symptoms and its ability to cause death by overdose.

Heroin Withdrawal Symptoms

Caused by regular heroin use over time
 Symptoms include muscle aches, nausea, and diarrhea
 Can be treated with maintenance medications

( You Can Beat This)

Ready to make a change?

Treatment for Heroin Addiction

Heroin addiction is caused by physical, mental and environmental factors. Overcoming withdrawal does little to treat mental and environmental factors. That’s why most people require professional treatment to quit using heroin and maintain recovery.


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