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drugs and death statistics
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jashn
Joined: Thu Dec 31, 2009 11:17 am Posts: 23
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Re: drugs and death statistics
Drug Facts And Statistics
From The Drug Project.
Deaths in the United States in a typical year are as follows:
* Tobacco kills about 400,000 * Alcohol kills about 80,000 * Workplace accidents kill 60,000 * Automobiles kill 40,000 * Cocaine kills about 2,500 * Heroin kills about 2,000 * Aspirin kills about 2,000 * Marijuana kills 0
There has never been a recorded death due to marijuana at any time in US history.
All illegal drugs combined kill under 20,000 per year, or a small percent of the number killed by alcohol and tobacco.
Tobacco kills more people each year than all of the people killed by all of the illegal drugs in the last one hundred years.
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Thu Dec 31, 2009 3:20 pm |
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aliya
Joined: Sat May 08, 2010 8:22 am Posts: 6 Location: UK
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Re: drugs and death statistics
Hello friends
The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration unveiled findings on drug-related mortality from the 2003 Drug Abuse Warning Network (DAWN) that provide a picture of deaths involving recent drug use in six states and 32 metropolitan areas.
Among the metropolitan areas, Baltimore and Albuquerque had the highest rates of drug misuse deaths, exceeding 200 deaths per one million population. Another 14 areas had drug misuse death rates that exceeded 100 deaths per one million population.
Six states provided mortality data to DAWN - Maine, Maryland, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Utah and Vermont. Fatality rates for drug misuse in these states ranged from 88 to 162 deaths per one million population. This is the first time there has been any state information from DAWN. These data show substantial variations in drug-related deaths across jurisdictions within the states, with the highest rates not always found in urban centers.
Participation in DAWN is voluntary so not all jurisdictions provide data. DAWN counts of drug-related deaths cannot be projected to the nation as a whole.
The study, "Drug Abuse Warning Network, 2003: Area Profiles of Drug-Related Mortality" is a new version of DAWN that is the result of a major redesign, so these data cannot be compared with data from prior years. In one key change, DAWN now captures any death related to recent drug use. Findings are presented for deaths involving drug misuse and abuse, as well as drug-related suicides.
Thanks
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Mon May 10, 2010 8:08 am |
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