Oregon DRUG REHAB AND TREATMENT CENTERS

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Drug Rehab Oregon
is here to help people with drug and/or alcohol abuse problems in Oregon. find treatment options. Due to our diverse networking system we can find a treatment option tailored to each individuals specific situation and needs. We are able to provide all phases of recovery included but not limited to, alcohol and/or drug intervention, drug and/or alcohol detox, in-patient treatment, out-patient treatment, short term treatment (30 days or less), long term treatment (90 days or longer).

Alcohol and Drug Intervention
Alcohol and Drug Detox
Inpatient Treatment
Short Term Treatment
Long Term Treatment
We design personalized treatment programs to provide each abuser with the greatest chance of a successful recovery outcome. Our comprehensive networking system works hand in hand with all of the drug treatment centers in Oregon. At Drug Rehab Oregon we know that each individual is unique and are treated as such. Deciding upon a treatment option in Oregon, or anywhere can be a daunting task for any individual or family, we will guide you through each step of a comprehensive treatment plan for you or your loved one. We are determined in our mission, that every drug and/or alcohol abuser in Oregon. that has a desire to change their life will be given a chance to recover from their addiction and we are dedicated to ensuring that they are given the opportunity to do so.

We realize that each individual in Oregon. is in a different financial situation and we will find treatment options for each individual regardless of their financial situation. No matter what your financial situation everyone will receive the treatment help they are looking for.

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Oregon: Meth's long run can be stopped

This country cannot just keep chasing methamphetamine. It has exhausted police, packed drug treatment programs and filled foster homes with neglected kids. Now it is rushing around gathering names of people buying cold tablets that can be converted to meth.

It is not working. Look at meth's new map: It has spread its own brand of misery from the West Coast through middle America and galloped into the South and the Northeast. Atlanta is a hub for meth. Vermont and Maine are seeing upswings in meth arrests, trafficking and addiction.

Oregon is here to tell you it can get much, much worse. Especially if you cling too long to the fiction that you can chase down all the mobile labs, the thousands of drug cooks and the countless people who abuse meth.

Oregon tried that. Here is what we have to show for it: About 85 percent of the property crime and identity theft in this state is now linked to meth. There is one particularly sad stat: Meth is the leading reason Oregon kids are removed from their homes.

There is a better way. As The Oregonian demonstrated in its series, "Unnecessary Epidemic," meth is uniquely vulnerable to a coordinated attack on its key ingredients, ephedrine and pseudoephedrine. These legal chemicals used in cold medicines such as Sudafed are produced in only a handful of manufacturing plants around the world.

In response to the series, U.S. Rep. Darlene Hooley, D-Ore., has introduced a bill that would require the nine major pseudoephedrine manufacturers worldwide to report their sales to the United States government. Companies that refused would lose their ability to export to the United States.

Hooley is on the right track. Her bill also includes a plan to publicly finance research on cold medications that would not require pseudoephedrine.

As The Oregonian's Steve Suo reported, the key is to sever the supply of legal chemicals now funneled to superlabs operated by Mexican cartels in California and south of the border. It is a strategy that has worked once before, as Suo reported, even if few noticed. In the 1990s authorities temporarily blocked the illegal trade in pseudoephedrine, meth production fell and the drug's use dropped sharply.

Hooley's bill is supported by U.S. Rep. Mark Souder, R-Indiana, chairman of the House Government Reform subcommittee on drug policy. Souder is offering another useful bill, which would cap imports of pseudoephedrine to the United States based on legitimate demand for cold products.

Meanwhile, Congress is also debating a plan to restrict cold medicines by putting them behind pharmacy counters nationwide. Oklahoma has used that approach to reduce the number of small mobile meth labs, and Oregon and other states have adopted the idea. Restricting retail access to pseudoephedrine is worth doing -- even over the objections of retailers and drug makers -- but it won't touch the 80 percent of meth produced in the superlabs.

To get at the tap root of the meth problem, Congress must pull the records of the pseudoephedrine manufacturers, track their shipments and starve the superlabs of meth ingredients. Ultimately, that's the only way to stop methamphetamine's awful march across this country.


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