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Heroin abuse and addiction is on the rise in the United States and has reached epidemic levels. According to WebMd.com , use of heroin in the U.S. doubled between 2007 and 2012. And, fatalities due to heroin overdose nearly doubled from 2010 to 2012.
Use of heroin has been illegal in the United States since 1924 and there are sound reasons why this highly addictive drug poses serious threats to individuals and to society itself. Heroin is dangerous to use and one of the most difficult drug addictions to treat successfully. Detox and withdrawal from heroin addiction can be painful and challenging. But, even more so is the danger of continued heroin use.
There are numerous telltale signs that an individual is using heroin . But, non-users often do not know what to look for or even what heroin is. Heroin is made from poppy seeds grown in Mexico, Asia and South America. The drug looks like white or brown powder or like black tar. Heroin goes by street names such as horse, smack or brown sugar.
Users either snort or smoke heroin or inject it directly into their veins, which is the quickest way to get the drug to the brain. Users who think they are using the drug for recreational purposes can become addicted after one or two uses.
After heroin enters the brain , it creates euphoria that is characterized as feeling like being “covered in a warm blanket where worries are gone.” Users move slower, think slower and even speak slower than when they are sober.
Heroin is more deadly than ever because users never really know what substances might be mixed with the drug. In many cases, dealers may mix powerful drugs or such as Fentanyl in their batches. In other cases, dealers may "cut" their batches with harmful chemicals. In addition to this, users who inject heroin run risks of deadly infections from shared needles.
Heroin usually makes users itchy. They tend to scratch themselves and cause open wounds that are slow to heal. Heroin users also experience slow heart rates and breathing difficulties. Many users are aware of these symptoms but keep using anyway. More and more heroin users are dying every day in the U.S.
Loss of appetite is one of the most common side effects of heroin use. Nausea and vomiting also discourage eating. Together, these heroin symptoms tend to make heroin addicts appear emaciated. Their faces are often drawn and anyone tracking their weight would notice alarming weight loss. Combined with puffiness around the eyes and drawn faces, heroin users can look like entirely different people in a very short time.
• Seeming disoriented or uncoordinated
• Being jittery or alert and then nodding off shortly after that
• Declining performance in school or work
• No concern for their personal appearance
• Isolation and withdrawing from loved ones
• Wearing sunglasses most of the time
From a practical standpoint, another reason heroin addicts do not eat and do lose weight is that they are always short of money. And, what money they do have they prefer to spend acquiring heroin. There is nothing glamorous about heroin addiction and chances of a fatal dose increase with every use. When heroin users overdose, they usually stop breathing. If they are not treated immediately, the condition will become fatal.
Heroin addiction is rampant in the U.S. Heroin abuse and addiction affects people from all income brackets, all races and all creeds. Even if heroin use started as a curious recreational experiment, it quickly turns to addiction because the brain wants the euphoric sensation to continue .
Heroin injection procedures are filled with serious health risks. And, heroin is often mixed with other unknown substances that can make each dose unsafe. Addiction is bad enough and usually leads to all sorts of criminal and legal problems. Soon, the addict is trapped in a culture that only cares about resupply and addicts are willing to go to any lengths to obtain this illegal substance. The spiral of the addiction cycle leads to severe health complications, including weight loss, and even death.
WebMd also reports that a rapid rise in fatal overdoes occurred in 2014 when heroin was mixed with the painkiller fentanyl. The combination was deadly. If you witness anyone suffering on overdose, call 911 immediately.
You can save the life of a heroin addict today and an addiction rehab center can help. Whether you intend to stage an intervention or admit a patient to heroin addiction rehab , we have the answers. Call today for a free heroin addiction consultation. The recovery solution begins with one phone call.
Many insurance plans will cover the cost of treatment. Please call
(844) 690-4040 for a free, no-obligation health insurance review.
*Most COBRA insurance plans are accepted during the COVID pandemic*
Our directory contains listings of addiction rehab facilities that are believed to be licensed and in good standing, but there may be an occasional error. This website is not affiliated with any facility or healthcare provider that may be listed on this website. Do not use any information on this website as official medical advice or to treat or diagnose any medical condition.






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Published: 11:44 GMT, 12 January 2016 | Updated: 15:16 GMT, 12 January 2016
These chilling images show a paedophile beauty pageant of Filipino girls as young as 11 are lined up in a cybersex den for perverts to choose one to be abused on a webcam.
The girls are forced to smile as they are raped on camera as voyeuristic paedophiles instruct abusers what to do with them.
After watching the ‘show’ some predators travel to dirt-poor slums of Iligan, in the Philippines, and pay to sexually abuse them. 
Chilling: A pot-bellied paedophile poses with a 13-year-old girl he met and selected to have sex with. He watched her perform sex acts on a webcam and travelled to the Philippines to abuse her
Paedophile pageant: Girls aged just 11, 17, 15, 14 and 12, all work in Ilican City's brothels. Most come from impoverished backgrounds and earn €2 a night from the abuse, which goes a long way in the Philippines
In one photo, an overweight pervert leers at the camera as he grasps a 13-year-old girl in one hand and a shot glass in the other.
And in another a suspected British paedophile is pictured sat bare-chested in front of his computer watching a Filipino girl aged 13 in a cybersex show.
The sickening abuse was exposed in an undercover investigation by Belgian journalist Peter Bridge - whose name has been changed to protect his identity.
Bridge spent two years investigating suppliers of online child sex abuse in the Philippines and identifying their clients for a documentary, ‘Children of the Cam’.
Bridge worked with Women and Children Protection Centre of the Philippine National Police and US NGO the International Justice Mission, an American NGO to expose the sickening trade in child abuse.
Posing as a paedophile, he established contact with ringleaders, gaining their trust, and was invited into the child cybersex dens.
Vile: A suspected British paedophile chats over webcam. Journalist Peter Bridge - not his real name - came across many men like him in a two year investigation into the depraved multi-billion dollar industry
Horror: Bridge's investigation has led to a number of girls being rescued - but he says it is just the tip of the iceberg, and has vowed to continue to fight the industry - despite receiving death threats
Hotspot: The Philippines is the top destination for predators in search of webcam child sex tourism, with some even travelling to the country to pay between €8 and €30. Here, a cybersex supplier chats online
Recounting in sickening detail how the investigation played out, he revealed how, after arriving in Iligan City, he was taken to a house where he was introduced to a group of girls.
He told MailOnline: 'They gave me a selection of girls to choose from, between the ages of 11 and 17. 
'I could choose any girls I wanted. I told them I was interested in having six girls, two every night - 15 and 17, 11, 13 and then younger. They agreed.'
The girls were later delivered to his hotel room where investigators wired the room with hidden cameras.
Over the next few hours he interviewed them to find out as much as he could about their conditions, families and treatment.
'I found out that some of the older girls were already recruiting younger girls into the industry,’ he said.
'Girls as young as 12 work independently recruiting friends. It is contact with the predators that turns them into really educated abusers.
'They learn how to receive the money, how to do these things unnoticed, how to make contacts. So they are really raised to abuse by the predators. They come from the US, Europe, Australia, Canada and Korea.
'There was a girl who was 15. She wants to become a school teacher. Her sister is 13. 
Children: Bridge met the girls who were sent to his room and interviewed them, collecting evidence against the pimps. Pictured: Underage girls in cybersex den just before police raid
Poverty: Iligan City is so poor that parents will sometimes hand over their daughters willingly, while older girls will begin recruiting and teaching younger girls to enter the disgusting trade
'They called me and the sister was sitting there with an eight-year-old girl on her lap and she just asked me 'what do you want me to do with her?'
'Doing this sort of work is traumatising. But for these girls it's just normal. They have been raised in a sea of abuse. And they don't know that it is abuse anymore.'
He added: 'I got access to the accounts of the group I had infiltrated.
'I could see the client list there, it was a group of about 200 people.
'I saw a British guy, he was a veteran, he knew the group very well. He was an instructor, giving instructions while the abuse was happening.
'There was a couple with a child, she was about 11 years old, and he was telling her what to do. Telling her she had to smile while she was doing it [sex acts], stuff like that.
'But this was just one group. There are many, many more.' 
Crackdown: Two female suppliers were arrested in a police raid (left and right), the victim, 14, is in the middle. The young girls are lined up and paedophiles direct abusers on a webcam
Saved: A girl of seven wrapped in blanket is rescued form cybersex den. Journalist Bridge said some of the victims are even babies aged just one-year-old
Online child abuse is the leading cyber-related crime in the Philippines.
Poverty combined with the rise of cheap, high speed internet access has turned the country into the hub of a billion-dollar cyber sex industry with tens of thousands of girls being exposed to sexual abuse.
Last year, 139 Brits alone were being investigated for paying to watch Filipino children online.
Yet that number is just the tip of the iceberg.
Interpol and the FBI estimate that over 750,000 paedophiles are online at any one time looking at child porn or live streaming.
The girls who get lured, or forced, into performing cybersex come from impoverished backgrounds.
And some families are so poor it is often the parents themselves who supply their children to the cybersex dens.
Dens like the one Bridge was invited to.
The journalist, who was forced into hiding and received death threats when he handed his dossier to police there in September.
In November detectives raided an apartment in Iligan and rescued 11 girls, the youngest of which was just seven.
Five suspects, three men and two women, were arrested in the raid in which they also found illegal drugs. 
Arrested: Lany Buco (left) and Jeffryl Aque (right) were both held in a raid where 11 girls were saved, the Women and Children Protection Centre, part of the Philippine National Police, confirmed
Caught: Kissy Pepito (left )and Cindy Omisol (right) were also taken into custody. Police in the Philippines said the suspects were 'caught in the act of recruiting and using children for online trafficking, pornography and sexual exploitation'
Fight: Jefford Dominguez was arrested in the same raid. All suspects remain under investigation by police, the statement said. But they face an uphill battle to stamp out the multi-billion dollar industry
The Women and Children Protection Centre, part of the Philippine National Police, confirmed: 'The suspects, caught in the act of recruiting and using children for online trafficking, pornography and sexual exploitation, were later identified as Jeffryl Aque, Lany Buco, Jefford Dominguez, Kissy Pepito, and Cindy Omisol.'
The suspects remain under investigation by police, the statement added.
But Bridge said police face an ‘uphill struggle’ to stamp out the multi-billion dollar trade in child sex abuse images.
He told MailOnline: 'Law enforcement is not getting a grip on this problem because it is so difficult to find people, predators, who are using live streaming. And the sector is professionalising fast.
'Without doing what I've been doing, you can't actually find these people.
‘You can track down payments through all these channels, and maybe you can find them on social media and adult websites, or whatever, but in order to get them in front of a judge you have to find evidence and that is very, very difficult.'
He went on: 'The problem is huge and it's under reported.
'The Philippines is the number one country in what is called webcam child sex tourism.
'And the descent into this sexual hell, as I call it, is spreading. It's like a virus. It's not difficult for the suppliers to find children.
Slavery: It is not just the cybersex industry young girls have to try and avoid - they can also be trafficked out of the country, but Bridge is determined to start fighting this appalling trade. Pictured: Iligan City after a flood
'Predators pay between €8 and €30 euros for the girls and boys as young as one. The child will get two euros.
'In a country where many people get paid less than €1 a day, even getting €2 means that they can eat more than one meal a day.'
Peter said he won’t stop until he has exposed the paedophiles and their suppliers to make children in the Philippines safe.
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Published by Associated Newspapers Ltd
Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday & Metro Media Group


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“Every year for swimming my brother and I take a family photo for the team pictures, but this year the crop job and my hair made it look like we were naked.”

'Our little secret.' Eagle Scout says writing graphic book about sex abuse helped him heal
'Our little secret.' Eagle Scout says writing graphic book about sex abuse helped him heal
Memory of horrific sexual abuse at a Southwest Florida Boy Scout camp
Aaron Averhart describes the memory of horrific sexual abuse during and after his years at Camp Miles, a Boy Scout camp in Southwest Florida.
H. Leo Kim and Alex Driehaus, Fort Myers News-Press
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“I was so excited, I could barely contain myself. The year was 1986, I had turned twelve a few short months before, and I was ready for my greatest adventure so far, the Camp Franklin Miles Boy Scout Summer Camp Program.” 
So Aaron Averhart writes in his just-completed book, Finding Foxboro, which he hopes to publish, about coping with sexual abuse during and after his years at Camp Miles, a Boy Scouts camp in Southwest Florida. 
Averhart was 15 when he reported in 1989 being molested by his scout leader William Sheehan over four years at camp. 
Only now, he says, at age 45, is he able to give a name to what happened to him and talk about it openly; a process helped by discovering other men in Foxborough, Massachusetts where Sheehan came from. Since 1998, almost 50 from that town have alleged the scout leader raped and molested them, too. 
Averhart found their stories on the internet in 2016 and reached out, overwhelmed by the discovery he was not alone.
It took him two years to pour his Camp Miles experiences onto the book’s pages, at times in graphic detail, as if by conjuring his abuser he might exorcise Sheehan’s power over him once and for all. 
He hopes the book will help others break their silence and begin to heal, he says.
Here are excerpts from Finding Foxboro :
“Everyone called him ‘Uncle Bill,” Averhart writes, “and he seemed loved and respected by scouts and leaders alike. He soon took a liking to me and brought me under his wing. He talked to me about staying and becoming a staff member for the remainder of the summer, which I was greatly interested in. Although I was officially too young he informed me, … he could pull some strings to make it happen. When I said yes in excitement, he assured me he would make it so.”
Many people have asked Averhart why he returned to Camp Miles after that first summer, he says, and why he told no one. The delayed revelations of thousands of former Boy Scouts across the country suggest his silence is not unique. 
“I endured these things in silence, knowing they were wrong, but not knowing what to do,” Averhart writes. “If I exposed him, everyone would discover what hap
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