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Introduction
Appearance and Use
Cost
Purity
The Effects
Chances of Getting Hooked
The Risks
The Law
Heroin is a natural opiate. It's made from the morphine which comes
from the opium poppy. Like many drugs made from opium, including
the synthetic opioids like methadone, heroin is a very strong painkiller.
Heroin sold as 'brown' is sometimes used by clubbers as a chill out
after a big night out. Brown is still heroin, some people mistakenly
think it's not as addictive.
ID: Brown, skag, H, horse, gear, smack.
top
Appearance and Use
Heroin comes as a white powder when it's pure such as that used by
doctors. But thanks to the range of substances it's cut with, street
heroin can be anything from brownish white to brown.
It can be smoked, snorted or dissolved in water and injected.
top
Cost
Feeding a heroin habit can cost up to £100 a day.
Finding the money to fund a habit is tough and some users
turn
to crime to get
the money they need.
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Purity
Heroin is big business. And the more
cheap fillers dealers can mix with it to pad it out, the more cash
they'll make.
A user has no
way of knowing what their heroin is mixed with.
Recent tests have shown it can contain nutmeg, brick dust, and
ground-up gravel.
top The Effects
- Heroin slows down body functioning and stops physical and psychological
pain.
- Most users get a rush or buzz a few minutes after taking it.
- A small dose of heroin gives the user a feeling of warmth and well-being.
- Bigger doses can make the user sleepy and very relaxed.
- The first dose of heroin can bring about dizziness and vomiting.
top Chances
of Getting Hooked
Big time even when it's smoked. Heroin is not addictive
instantly but over time the desired effects reduce so
much that users have to take more and more just
to get the same
effects
and even more
just to feel 'normal'. Effects
on the brain cause 'craving' and strong psychological
and physical dependence.
Drugs have been developed to help treat heroin
addiction. These include substitutes for heroin
such as
methadone and subutex (bupranorphine)
and also drugs like naltrexone
that block the effects of heroin so you can't
get a high.
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The
Risks
- Deaths
from overdose occur. But the risk increases after a period
off the drug because
the body's tolerance for the drug goes down.
- Excessive doses can lead to coma and even death from respiratory
failure.
- If heroin is taken with other drugs, including alcohol, overdose
is much more
likely.
- Other downers such as benzodiazepine tranquillisers are also associated
with heroin
overdose deaths.
- There's a risk of death due to inhaling vomit as heroin stops the
body's
cough reflex working properly.
- Injecting heroin can do nasty damage to your veins and has been known
to lead
to gangrene.
- The risks of sharing needles and other works to inject are well-known,
putting
you in danger of infections like hepatitis B or C and of course HIV/AIDS.
top The Law
Heroin is a class A drug.
top
For
more information or if you would like to talk to someone
at the Advice Centre, please feel free to phone (01202
262291), email (info@quayadvice.co.uk)
or call in to the Quay Advice Centre (map)
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