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Cocaine. Morgann , Jasmine, Maggie, Angella , Akee , Amanda. What is cocaine?. Cocaine is a powerfully addictive central nervous system stimulant that is snorted, injected, or smoked. It is an extraction from the leaves of a coca plant. Cocaine's appearance is white; crystalline powder-like.
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Cocaine Morgann, Jasmine, Maggie, Angella, Akee, Amanda
What is cocaine? • Cocaine is a powerfully addictive central nervous system stimulant that is snorted, injected, or smoked. It is an extraction from the leaves of a coca plant. Cocaine's appearance is white; crystalline powder-like. • Cocaine can be used to comfort peoples emotions. • Slang terms: Base, Big C, Candy Cane, Coke, Flake
How does it enter the body? • Cocaine can be • Snorted: Cocaine can be snorted on a clean surface (toilet lid, a table, or car dash). The user makes two neat lines, using either a credit card or playing card to shape it as thick as a straw, and as long as a pen lid. • Injected: Cocaine is injected directly into the blood stream (veins) and heightens the intensity of its effects. • Smoked: Smoking cocaine involves the user to inhale the cocaine vapor or smoke from a glass pipe, sometimes called a shooter, and then the smoke travels to the lungs.
Drug Effects: Short-term • Cocaine effects appear almost immediately after a single dose. Taken in small amounts, cocaine usually makes you feel euphoric, energetic, talkative, and mentally alert. Your body becomes very alert to 3 senses; sight, sound, and touch. Even if you take small amounts, your need for food and sleep begins to decrease. • Constricted blood vessels, dilated pupils, violent behavior, and increased body temperature, heart rate, and blood pressure.
Drug Effects: Long-term • When you are exposed to cocaine for a long period of time, the brain starts to adapt. Your body starts to develop a tolerance for the drug. • Physical effects: Brain damage, heart attacks, psychological problems • Emotional effects: You become anxious, paranoid, mood swings, suicidal, and depressed
Legal Consequences • Cocaine is a Class A drug • If you get caught making, supplying, or possessing cocaine: 5-10 years in prison and a fine • Your punishment depends on the amount of cocaine you have • If you have a previous drug charge, your penalty will be more severe.
Media Influences • 1) Above the Influence • The Above the Influence organization advertises that cocaine is bad, and tells teens to stay away from drugs. • On their website, they tell you what cocaine may also be known as, they define what the drug is, they explain the risks the drug could bring, the effects (long-term), and lastly they inform you on how dangerous the drug is.
Media Influences • 2)D.A.R.E. ( Drug Abuse Resistance Education) • A substance abuse prevention education program that visits different schools all over the United States • They tell you what other names cocaine may have, give you a definition and description of what cocaine is used for, and they tell you the dangerous effects caused by using cocaine, or any other type of drug
Community Resources • First Step Services LLC • 211 E Six Forks Road • (919)-833-8899 • First Steep provides a free substance abuse education program to families and other interested parties • Drug Rehab • 324 South Wilmington Street #221 Raleigh, NC 27601 • (919)-238-1033 • Benefits: Drug Rehab Raleigh assesses the psychological origins of drug abuse. They are able to customize an ideally effective treatment program for each client.
5 Question Quiz • Where does cocaine come from? • What are the three ways cocaine can enter the body? • Name one short term effect of cocaine. • Between how many years can you be in prison for getting caught with cocaine? • Name two community resources you can go to for help.
Work Cited • "Cocaine Drug Slang Dictionary." Cocaine Drug Slang Dictionary. N.p., n.d. Web. 09 May 2013. • "Cocaine." National Institute on Drug Abuse. N.p., n.d. Web. 09 May 2013. • "D.A.R.E." D.A.R.E.N.p., n.d. Web. 09 May 2013 • "DRUG FACTS." Drug Facts. N.p., n.d. Web. 09 May 2013. • "Health A-Z." Cocaine Use and Its Effects. N.p., n.d. Web. 09 May 2013. • "Prenatal Cocaine Exposure." Wikipedia. Wikimedia Foundation, 05 Sept. 2013. Web. 09 May 2013. • "Snorting Cocaine." DRUGSTYLE.COM. WordPress, 23 June 2012. Web. 09 May 2013. • "What Are the Legal Consequences of Using or Distributing Cocaine?" WikiAnswers. Answers, n.d. Web. 09 May 2013.