HOST: The United Nations estimates that worldwide, some 50 million 
people are users of heroin, cocaine, and synthetic addictive drugs 
alone. Of these, hundreds of thousands consequently die each year. Dr. 
Robert DuPont, a leader in addictive drug abuse and treatment, was the 
first Director of the US National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) and the
 second White House Drug Chief.
Dr.
 Robert DuPont (m):The drug problem in the world today is not 
like anything we’ve ever had before. This is a new epidemic.  It started
 in about the 1960s and it is continuing to spread throughout the world.
 Many of the drugs that are on the list of illegal drugs, are drugs that
 have been around a long time.  
But what’s new is even these old
 drugs are now used in entirely new ways. They are smoked and they are 
injected intravenously. That makes them much more powerful than they 
ever were before. 
Plus, there’s a whole new generation of chemicals,
 drugs like Methamphetamine for example or MDMA or LSD (Ecstasy). 
Dr. Robert 
DuPont (m): These, All these drugs are all addictive substances 
that have devastating effects on the people who take them.  The way it 
works is very simple, and that is, the new users are unaware of the 
consequences of where they lead. They are seduced into the chemical 
experience of using the drug in the view that they can handle it, they 
can control it. And of course, once they get in there, it becomes a trap
 that they can’t get out of.
HOST: These are pictures of 
individuals before and after they used the addictive drug known as 
Methamphetamine, a stimulant that can cause, among others, insomnia, 
confusion, paranoia, hallucinations, violent behavior, convulsions, 
heart attack, stroke, and death.
http://www.drugfree.org/portal/drugissue/methresources/faces/index.htmlhttp://www.drugfree.org/portal/drugissue/methresources/faces/photo_11.html
 http://www.drugfree.org/portal/drugissue/methresources/faces/photo_10.html
 http://www.drugfree.org/portal/drugissue/methresources/faces/photo_5.htmlHOST:
 Addictive drugs not only damage one’s physical appearance, but can ruin
 every aspect of one’s precious life. They take away friends, family, 
money, self-esteem, and one’s future.
For more information, 
please visit Dr. Robert DuPont’s Institute for Behavior and Health at 
www.ibhinc.org