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Warning Signs of Alcohol Abuse |
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Arizona Population, Income, Education, Employment, and Federal Funds
Arizona Population |
|
Total |
Year |
1980 |
2,716,546 |
1990 |
3,665,228 |
2000 |
5,130,632 |
2009 (latest estimates) |
6,595,778 |
Arizona Income
|
|
Total |
Arizona Per-capita income (2008 dollars) |
2007 |
34,365 |
2008 |
34,339 |
Percent change |
-3.8 |
|
Arizona Earnings per job (2008 dollars) |
2007 |
48,103 |
2008 |
46,496 |
Percent change |
-3.3 |
|
Arizona Poverty rate (percent) |
1979 |
13.2 |
1989 |
15.7 |
1999 |
13.9 |
2008 (latest model-based estimates) |
14.7 |
Arizona Education (Persons 25 and older)
|
|
Total |
Arizona Percent not completing high school |
1980 |
27.6 |
1990 |
21.3 |
2000 |
19.0 |
|
Arizona Percent completing high school only |
1980 |
34.3 |
1990 |
26.1 |
2000 |
24.3 |
|
Arizona Percent completing some college |
1980 |
20.6 |
1990 |
32.2 |
2000 |
33.1 |
|
Arizona Percent completing college |
1980 |
17.4 |
1990 |
20.3 |
2000 |
23.5 |
Arizona Employment
|
|
Total |
Total number of jobs in AZ. |
2007 |
3,454,908 |
2008 |
3,437,191 |
|
Arizona Percent employment change |
2006-2007 |
2.3 |
2007-2008 |
1.0 |
2008-2009 |
-2.6 |
|
Arizona Unemployment rate (percent) |
2008 |
5.9 |
2009 |
9.1 |
AZ. Federal Funds, FY 2008
|
|
Total |
Federal funding, dollars per person |
Arizona All Federal funds |
9,375 |
|
Federal funding by purpose |
Arizona Agriculture and natural resources |
23 |
Arizona Community resources |
1,503 |
Arizona Defense and space |
1,933 |
Arizona Human resources |
181 |
Arizona Income security |
4,415 |
Arizona National functions |
1,321 |
|
Federal funding by type of payments |
Arizona Grants |
1,321 |
Arizona Direct loans |
424 |
Arizona Guaranteed/insured loans |
1,313 |
Arizona Retirement/disability payments |
2,459 |
Arizona Other direct payments to
individuals |
1,204 |
Arizona Direct payments, not to
individuals |
44 |
Arizona Procurement contracts |
2,128 |
Arizona Salaries and wages |
482 |
Arizona Organic Agriculture
|
|
2008 |
Number of certified operations in AZ. |
77 |
AZ. Crops (acres) |
29,164 |
AZ. Pasture & rangeland (acres) |
84 |
AZ. Total acres |
29,248 |
Arizona Farm Characteristics
AZ. 2007 Census of Agriculture |
|
|
2007 |
Arizona Approximate total land area (acres) |
72,696,492 |
Arizona Total farmland (acres) |
26,117,899 |
Arizona Percent of total land area |
35.9 |
|
Arizona Cropland (acres) |
1,205,425 |
Arizona Percent of total farmland |
4.6 |
Arizona Percent in pasture |
|
Arizona Percent irrigated |
68.3 |
|
Arizona Harvested Cropland (acres) |
832,406 |
|
Arizona Woodland (acres) |
279,779 |
Arizona Percent of total farmland |
1.1 |
|
Arizona Pastureland (acres) |
22,900,777 |
Percent of total farmland |
87.7 |
|
Arizona Land in house lots, ponds, roads, wasteland, etc. (acres) |
1,731,918 |
Percent of total farmland |
6.6 |
|
Arizona Conservation practices |
Arizona Farmland in conservation or wetlands reserve programs (acres) |
|
|
Arizona Average farm size (acres) |
1,670 |
|
Arizona Farms by size (percent) |
1 to 99 acres |
84.3 |
100 to 499 acres |
7.7 |
500 to 999 acres |
2.8 |
1000 to 1,999 acres |
2.0 |
2,000 or more acres |
3.3 |
|
Arizona Farms by sales (percent) |
Less than $9,999 |
81.4 |
$10,000 to $49,999 |
9.6 |
$50,000 to $99,999 |
2.3 |
$100,000 to $499,999 |
3.2 |
More than $500,000 |
3.5 |
|
Tenure of farmers |
Arizona Full owner (farms) |
13,989 |
Percent of total |
89.5 |
|
Arizona Part owner (farms) |
913 |
Percent of total |
5.8 |
|
Arizona Tenant owner (farms) |
735 |
Percent of total |
4.7 |
|
Arizona Farm organization |
Arizona Individuals/family, sole proprietorship (farms) |
13,721 |
Percent of total |
87.7 |
|
Arizona Family-held corporations (farms) |
612 |
Percent of total |
3.9 |
|
Arizona Partnerships (farms) |
962 |
Percent of total |
6.2 |
|
Arizona Non-family corporations (farms) |
117 |
Percent of total |
0.7 |
|
Arizona Others - cooperative, estate or trust, institutional, etc. (farms) |
225 |
Percent of total |
1.4 |
|
Characteristics of principal farm operators |
Arizona Average operator age (years) |
58.5 |
Percent with farming as their primary occupation |
61.1 |
Men |
9,617 |
Women |
6,020 |
|
Arizona Farm Financial Indicators
Arizona Farm income and value added data |
|
2008 |
|
Arizona Number of farms |
15,600 |
|
|
Thousands $ |
Arizona Final crop output |
1,935,613 |
+ Arizona Final animal output |
1,527,272 |
+ Arizona Services and forestry |
600,816 |
= Arizona Final agricultural sector output |
4,063,701 |
|
- Arizona Intermediate consumption outlays |
2,551,425 |
+ Arizona Net government transactions |
7,835 |
= Arizona Gross value added |
1,520,111 |
|
- Arizona Capital consumption |
239,924 |
|
= Arizona Net value added |
1,280,187 |
|
- Arizona Factor payments |
528,836 |
Arizona Employee compensation (total hired labor) |
443,300 |
Arizona Net rent received by nonoperator landlords |
-28,134 |
Arizona Real estate and nonreal estate interest |
113,670 |
|
= Arizona Net farm income |
751,351 |
|
Arizona Top Commodities, Exports, and Counties
Arizona Top 5 agriculture commodities, 2009
|
|
Value of receipts
thousand $ |
1. Arizona Cattle and calves |
600,422 |
2. Arizona Dairy products |
491,623 |
3. Arizona Lettuce |
449,632 |
4. Arizona Hay |
208,501 |
5. Arizona Cotton |
121,087 |
|
All commodities |
2,943,464 |
|
Arizona Top 5 agriculture exports, estimates, FY 2009 |
|
Value million $ |
1. Arizona Cotton and linters |
133.5 |
2. Arizona Other |
126.9 |
3. Arizona Vegetables and preparations |
89.0 |
4. Arizona Wheat and products |
61.1 |
5. Arizona Live animals and meat |
53.8 |
|
Arizona Overall rank |
624.8 |
Arizona Top 5 counties in agricultural sales 2007 |
|
Thousands $ |
1. Yuma County |
959,968 |
2. Maricopa County |
813,491 |
3. Pinal County |
799,811 |
4. La Paz County |
136,593 |
5. Cochise County |
117,130 |
|
State total |
3,234,552 |
|
State Offices
Arizona Drug Policy, Enforcement and Government Agencies
Governor's Office
Press Secretary
Office of the Governor
State Capitol
1700 West Washington Street
Phoenix, AZ 85007
(602) 542-1342
State Legislative Contact
Legislative Council
State Capitol, Legislative Services Wing
1700 West Washington Street,Room 100
Phoenix, AZ 85007
(602) 255-4236
State Drug Program Coordinator
Governor's Office of Drug Policy
State Capitol, West Wing
1700 West Washington Street,Room 503
Phoenix, AZ 85007
(602) 542-3456
Attorney General's Office
Office of the Attorney General
Department of Law
1275 West Washington Street
Phoenix, AZ 85007
(602) 542-4266
Law Enforcement Planning
Department of Corrections
1645 West Jefferson Street, Suite 420
Phoenix, AZ 85007
(602) 255-3191
Crime Prevention Office
Arizona Crime Prevention Association
P.O. Box 375
Phoenix, AZ 85030
(602) 834-2614
Statistical Analysis Center
Arizona Criminal Justice Commission
1501 West Washington Street,Suite 207
Phoenix, AZ 85007
(602) 542-1928
Uniform Crime Reports Contact
Uniform Crime Reports Program
Arizona Department of Public Safety
P.O. Box 6638
Phoenix, AZ 85005
(602) 223-2263
BJA Strategy Preparation Agency
Arizona Criminal Justice Commission
1501 West Washington Street,Suite 207
Phoenix, AZ 85007
(602) 542-4852
Judicial Agency
Supreme Court
State Capitol, West Wing
1700 West Washington Street,Room 209
Phoenix, AZ 85007
(602) 255-4359
Corrections Agency
Department of Corrections
1601 West Jefferson Street
Phoenix, AZ 85007
(602) 542-5536
RADAR Network Agency
Arizona Prevention Resource Center
Arizona State University
Box 871708
Tempe, AZ 85287-1708
(602) 965-9666
HIV-Prevention Program
Disease Prevention Services
3815 North Black Canyon Highway
Phoenix, AZ 85015-5351
(602) 230-5819
Drug and Alcohol Agency
Offices of Community Behavioral Health
Department of Health Services
2632 East Thomas Street
Phoenix, AZ 85016
(602) 255-1030
State Coordinator for Drug-Free Schools
Arizona Department of Education
Comprehensive Health Unit
1535 West Jefferson
Phoenix, AZ 85007
(602) 542-3051
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Arizona
Alcohol abuse in Arizona refers to a pattern of drinking that results in harm to one’s health, interpersonal relationships, or ability to work. Certain manifestations of alcohol abuse include failure to fulfill responsibilities at work, school or home; drinking in dangerous situations, such as while driving; legal problems associated with alcohol use; and continued drinking despite problems that are caused or worsened by drinking. Also keep in mind that alcohol abuse can lead to alcohol dependence.
Alcohol abuse has many risks. If a person has been severely drunk more than twice in their life, driven while drunk or regularly binge drink (more than 5 or 6 standard drinks in one drinking session) this is considered to be alcohol abuse in Arizona. The effects of alcohol abuse include, but are not limited to, violence, injuries, unprotected sexual activities and additionally social and financial problems.
Arizona alcohol abuse treatment needs to be readily available. Because individuals who are addicted to alcohol may be uncertain about entering alcohol abuse treatment, taking advantage of opportunities when they are ready for treatment is crucial. Potential treatment applicants can be lost if alcohol abuse treatment is not immediately available or is not readily accessible.
Changing problem drinking habits takes time and alcohol abuse treatment, especially if your social life has revolved around alcohol or you’ve used drinking to cope with stress and numb your emotions. Alcohol abuse treatment is a process; there is no quick and easy fix.
What takes place in Arizona alcohol abuse treatment? Alcohol abuse treatment occurs over time — it is not just a single moment in time. It is a constantly evolving period that requires work to maintain. Recovery is a new beginning, and can be a time of great personal fulfillment and growth for people in alcohol abuse treatment and their families. Signs that alcohol abuse treatment is working includes increased health and wellness. The person in treatment will improve physically and emotionally as well as in his or her relationship with others.
The first component of most treatment programs is alcohol detox. Arizona alcohol detox is about removing alcohol and its effects from your system. The body’s reaction to the removal of the alcohol it has become dependent on is called withdrawal. During alcohol withdrawal the recovering addict often experiences cravings for more alcohol. This is not uncommon during alcohol detox and for some time after as well. Detox is the first step in overcoming alcohol abuse and dependence. For most, alcohol detox is a pertinent step in the addiction recovery process.
There are numerous withdrawal symptoms or side effects when a person stops or dramatically reduces alcohol abuse after heavy or prolonged use. Those side effects include:
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Abdominal cramps
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Agitation
-
Anxiety
-
Behavioral changes
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Confusion
-
Depression
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Diarrhea
-
Drug cravings
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Headaches
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Nausea
-
Shaking
-
Sleeplessness
-
Sweating
-
Vomiting
Long-term alcoholics will require medical alcohol detox in order to make a successful recovery. This is because the withdrawal effects of alcohol detox can be quite dangerous for the long-term alcoholic. On the other hand, attending an Arizona alcohol detox program may or may not be necessary depending upon an individual's age, medical status, and history of alcohol intake. For example, a young man who binge drinks and seeks treatment one week after his last use of alcohol may not require alcohol detox before beginning treatment for alcoholism.
Once the alcohol detox process is complete, recovering addicts enter in an Arizona alcohol rehab. People in alcohol rehab abstain from substance use. By doing so, they regain their physical health and emotional well-being. Once again, they are able to enjoy everyday activities with energy, enthusiasm, optimism, and confidence. With the help of alcohol rehab, they will return to being more loving spouses, happier kids, effective parents, good neighbors, and dedicated employees.
No single alcohol rehab program is appropriate for all individuals. Matching alcohol rehab settings, interventions, and services to each individual's particular problems and needs is critical to his or her ultimate success in returning to productive functioning in the family, workplace, and society.
Year |
Total vs. Alcohol Related Fatalities in Arizona |
Tot |
Alc-Rel |
% |
0.08+ |
% |
1982 |
724 |
422 |
58 |
376 |
52 |
1983 |
675 |
388 |
57 |
350 |
52 |
1984 |
869 |
473 |
54 |
418 |
48 |
1985 |
893 |
502 |
56 |
444 |
50 |
1986 |
1007 |
582 |
58 |
511 |
51 |
1987 |
939 |
532 |
57 |
462 |
49 |
1988 |
944 |
488 |
52 |
439 |
47 |
1989 |
879 |
443 |
50 |
390 |
44 |
1990 |
869 |
434 |
50 |
398 |
46 |
1991 |
816 |
429 |
53 |
390 |
48 |
1992 |
809 |
403 |
50 |
359 |
44 |
1993 |
801 |
400 |
50 |
355 |
44 |
1994 |
904 |
410 |
45 |
360 |
40 |
1995 |
1035 |
478 |
46 |
410 |
40 |
1996 |
994 |
442 |
45 |
386 |
39 |
1997 |
951 |
451 |
47 |
405 |
43 |
1998 |
980 |
444 |
45 |
377 |
39 |
1999 |
1024 |
424 |
41 |
371 |
36 |
2000 |
1036 |
469 |
45 |
407 |
39 |
2001 |
1051 |
487 |
46 |
425 |
40 |
2002 |
1132 |
489 |
43 |
428 |
38 |
2003 |
1120 |
470 |
42 |
408 |
36 |
2004 |
1150 |
435 |
38 |
376 |
33 |
2005 |
1,177 |
492 |
42 |
434 |
37 |
2006 |
1,280 |
502 |
39 |
409 |
32 |
Arizona DUI Penalties
First-time DUI Conviction:
- Minimum 10-day jail sentence
- Minimum $250 fine
- Additional $500 assessment fees
- Possible installation of ignition interlock device
- Completion of alcohol education course
- Potential community service
Second Offense (within 84 months)
- Minimum 90-day jail sentence
- Minimum $500 fine
- One year driver's license suspension
- Possible installment of ignition interlock device
- Possible assessment fees totaling over $2,000
- 30 hours of community service
Increased Penalties for an Aggravated DUI (BAC of .15% or more)
- Minimum 30-day jail sentence
- Minimum $250 fine
- Possible installment of ignition interlock device
- Possible assessment fees totaling over $2,000
- Potential community service
Second Aggravated DUI Offense (within 84 months) - Minimum 120-day jail sentence
- Minimum $500 fine
- At least one year driver's license suspension
- Possible installment of ignition interlock device
- Possible assessment fees totaling over $2,000
- Minimum 30 hours of community service
- Misdemeanor conviction
Arizona Alcohol Statistics Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatality Data 2008 Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities: | 266 | Youth Under 21 Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities: | 35 | Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities per 100,000 population | | Total All Ages: | 4.1 | Youth Under 21: | 1.8 | 1998-2008 Percent Change in Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities per 100,000 Population | | Total All Ages: | -38.2 | Youth Under 21: | -54.0 | Hardcore Drunk Drivers Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities Involving High BAC Drivers (.15+): | 71% | Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities Involving Repeat Offenders by BAC level | | BAC .08 - .14: | 35% | BAC .15+: | 65% | Youth Alcohol Consumption Data 2006-2007 (12-20 Year Olds) Consumed Alcohol in the Past Month: | 28.4% | Binge Drinking in the Past Month: | 18.9% | Arrest Data 2008 Driving Under the Influence | | Under 18: | 561 | Total All Ages: | 39,746 | Liquor Laws | | Under 18: | 5,789 | Total All Ages: | 29,984 | Drunkenness | | Under 18: | 0 | Total All Ages: | 4 |
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Alcohol abuse major factor in Arizona boating deaths
With Lake Havasu and the Colorado River ranking fourth in the nation’s top 10 deadliest waters, it seems alcohol intoxicated boat operators are partly to blame, said an Arizona Game and Fish off
More | | No change in rules after alcohol abuse related death in Arizona State Park
An Arizona State Park official said there would be no change in rules regarding alcohol consumption at Patagonia Lake State Park following the drowning death of a 28-year old man who investigators sai
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Alcohol Treatment Centers by City in Arizona Listed Alphabetically: | | Quick Drug Facts |
Does alcohol kill brain cells? Yes, but only when large quantities are drunk over a period of many years. Thus, alcohol abusers and alcohol dependent individuals (collectively called "problem drinkers") often suffer from Korsakoff Syndrome, amnesia, confusion, and dementia. This effect is due to alcohol toxicity on the hippocampus, or "memory" portion of the brain. Social drinking, however, does not kill brain cells.
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In many countries, particularly in Africa, beverages are made traditionally in villages or homes through fermentation of seeds, grains, fruits, vegetables and palm trees. They are often not high in alcohol and spoil quickly.
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Serving alcoholic beverages to guests upon entrance into one's home has become the norm for modern hospitality.
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The legal use of alcohol by teenagers and even children was accepted in America through the nineteenth century.
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