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Warning Signs of Alcohol Abuse |
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Oklahoma Population, Income, Education, Employment, and Federal Funds
Oklahoma Population |
|
Total |
Year |
1980 |
3,025,487 |
1990 |
3,145,585 |
2000 |
3,450,654 |
2009 (latest estimates) |
3,687,050 |
Oklahoma Income |
|
Total |
Oklahoma Per-capita income (2008 dollars) |
2007 |
34,298 |
2008 |
35,969 |
Percent change |
1.0 |
|
Oklahoma Earnings per job (2008 dollars) |
2007 |
43,237 |
2008 |
42,930 |
Percent change |
-0.7 |
|
Oklahoma Poverty rate (percent) |
1979 |
13.4 |
1989 |
16.7 |
1999 |
14.7 |
2008 (latest model-based estimates) |
15.7 |
Oklahoma Education (Persons 25 and older) |
|
Total |
Oklahoma Percent not completing high school |
1980 |
34.0 |
1990 |
25.4 |
2000 |
19.4 |
|
Oklahoma Percent completing high school only |
1980 |
34.8 |
1990 |
30.5 |
2000 |
31.5 |
|
Oklahoma Percent completing some college |
1980 |
16.1 |
1990 |
26.3 |
2000 |
28.8 |
|
Oklahoma Percent completing college |
1980 |
15.1 |
1990 |
17.8 |
2000 |
20.3 |
Oklahoma Employment |
|
Total |
Oklahoma Total number of jobs |
2007 |
2,145,016 |
2008 |
2,206,469 |
|
Oklahoma Percent employment change |
2006-2007 |
1.2 |
2007-2008 |
0.8 |
2008-2009 |
-1.6 |
|
Oklahoma Unemployment rate (percent) |
2008 |
3.7 |
2009 |
6.4 |
Oklahoma Federal Funds, FY 2008 |
|
Total |
Oklahoma Federal funding, dollars per person |
Oklahoma All Federal funds |
8,418 |
|
Oklahoma Federal funding by purpose |
Oklahoma Agriculture and natural resources |
185 |
Oklahoma Community resources |
1,042 |
Oklahoma Defense and space |
777 |
Oklahoma Human resources |
197 |
Oklahoma Income security |
5,353 |
Oklahoma National functions |
864 |
|
Oklahoma Federal funding by type of payments |
Oklahoma Grants |
1,306 |
Oklahoma Direct loans |
74 |
Oklahoma Guaranteed/insured loans |
804 |
Oklahoma Retirement/disability payments |
3,061 |
Oklahoma Other direct payments to
individuals |
1,563 |
Oklahoma Direct payments, not to
individuals |
138 |
Oklahoma Procurement contracts |
783 |
Oklahoma Salaries and wages |
690 |
Oklahoma Organic Agriculture
|
|
2008 |
Oklahoma Number of certified operations |
66 |
Oklahoma Crops (acres) |
14,272 |
Oklahoma Pasture & rangeland (acres) |
7,298 |
Oklahoma Total acres |
21,570 |
Oklahoma Farm Characteristics
Oklahoma 2007 Census of Agriculture |
|
|
2007 |
Oklahoma Approximate total land area (acres) |
43,905,445 |
Oklahoma Total farmland (acres) |
35,087,269 |
Percent of total land area |
79.9 |
|
Oklahoma Cropland (acres) |
13,007,625 |
Percent of total farmland |
37.1 |
Percent in pasture |
21.4 |
Percent irrigated |
3.7 |
|
Oklahoma Harvested Cropland (acres) |
7,650,080 |
|
Woodland (acres) |
2,468,152 |
Percent of total farmland |
7.0 |
Percent in pasture |
69.2 |
|
Oklahoma Pastureland (acres) |
18,713,085 |
Percent of total farmland |
53.3 |
|
Oklahoma Land in house lots, ponds,
roads, wasteland, etc. (acres) |
898,407 |
Percent of total farmland |
2.6 |
|
Oklahoma Conservation practices |
Oklahoma Farmland in conservation or
wetlands reserve programs
(acres) |
1,150,524 |
|
Oklahoma Average farm size (acres) |
405 |
|
Oklahoma Farms by size (percent) |
1 to 99 acres |
42.0 |
100 to 499 acres |
40.4 |
500 to 999 acres |
8.6 |
1000 to 1,999 acres |
4.8 |
2,000 or more acres |
4.1 |
|
Oklahoma Farms by sales (percent) |
Less than $9,999 |
62.9 |
$10,000 to $49,999 |
23.5 |
$50,000 to $99,999 |
5.3 |
$100,000 to $499,999 |
6.2 |
More than $500,000 |
2.1 |
|
Oklahoma Tenure of farmers |
Full owner (farms) |
56,948 |
Percent of total |
65.8 |
|
Oklahoma Part owner (farms) |
24,270 |
Percent of total |
28.0 |
|
Oklahoma Tenant owner (farms) |
5,347 |
Percent of total |
6.2 |
|
Oklahoma Farm organization |
Oklahoma Individuals/family, sole
proprietorship (farms) |
77,412 |
Percent of total |
89.4 |
|
Oklahoma Family-held corporations
(farms) |
1,566 |
Percent of total |
1.8 |
|
Oklahoma Partnerships (farms) |
5,905 |
Percent of total |
6.8 |
|
Oklahoma Non-family corporations (farms) |
203 |
Percent of total |
0.2 |
|
Oklahoma Others - cooperative, estate or
trust, institutional, etc. (farms) |
1,479 |
Percent of total |
1.7 |
|
Oklahoma Characteristics of principal farm operators |
Average operator age (years) |
57.6 |
Percent with farming as their
primary occupation |
41.6 |
Men |
75,716 |
Women |
10,849 |
|
Oklahoma Farm Financial Indicators
Oklahoma Farm income and value added data |
|
2008 |
|
Oklahoma Number of farms |
86,600 |
|
|
Thousands $ |
Final crop output |
1,949,447 |
+ Final animal output |
3,923,818 |
+ Services and forestry |
1,128,095 |
= Final agricultural sector output |
7,001,360 |
|
- Intermediate consumption outlays |
4,578,588 |
+ Net government transactions |
136,916 |
= Gross value added |
2,559,688 |
|
- Capital consumption |
691,011 |
|
= Net value added |
1,868,677 |
|
- Factor payments |
841,894 |
Employee compensation (total hired labor) |
412,731 |
Net rent received by nonoperator landlords |
88,154 |
Real estate and nonreal estate interest |
341,009 |
|
= Net farm income |
1,026,783 |
|
Oklahoma Top Commodities, Exports, and Counties
OK. Top 5 agriculture commodities, 2009 |
|
Value of receipts
thousand $ |
1. Cattle and calves |
2,226,324 |
2. Broilers |
557,723 |
3. Hogs |
511,301 |
4. Wheat |
495,822 |
5. Dairy products |
150,784 |
|
All commodities |
4,844,882 |
|
OK. Top 5 agriculture exports, estimates, FY 2009 |
|
Value
million $ |
1. Live animals and meat |
250.0 |
2. Wheat and products |
248.0 |
3. Cotton and linters |
95.4 |
4. Poultry and products |
95.3 |
5. Feeds and fodders |
71.6 |
|
Overall rank |
960.3 |
|
OK. Top 5 counties in agricultural sales 2007 |
|
Thousands $ |
1. Texas County |
779,868 |
2. Cimarron County |
261,870 |
3. Le Flore County |
213,060 |
4. Beaver County |
188,463 |
5. McCurtain County |
186,206 |
|
State total |
5,806,061 |
|
State Offices
Oklahoma Drug Policy, Enforcement and Government Agencies
Governor's Office
Office of the Governor
State Capitol, Room 212
Oklahoma City, OK 73105
(405) 521-2342
State Drug Program Coordinator
Drug Policy Board
State Capitol, Room 112
Oklahoma City, OK 73105
(405) 521-3921
Attorney General's Office
Office of the Attorney General
State Capitol, Room 112
Oklahoma City, OK 73105
(405) 521-3921
Crime Prevention Office
Oklahoma Crime Prevention Association
3901 Northwest 62d Street
Oklahoma City, OK 73112
(405) 943-9198
Statistical Analysis Center
Oklahoma Criminal Justice Resource Center
621 North Robinson, Suite 445
Oklahoma City, OK 73102
(405) 232-3328
Uniform Crime Reports Contact
Uniform Crime Reporting Section
Oklahoma Bureau of Investigation
6600 North Harvey, Suite 300
Oklahoma City, OK 73116
(405) 848-6724
BJA Strategy Preparation Agency
District Attorney's Council
2200 Classen Boulevard, Suite 1800
Oklahoma City, OK 73106-5811
(405) 557-6707
Judicial Agency
Administrative Office of the Courts
Denver Davison Building, Room 305
1915 North Stiles Avenue
Oklahoma City, OK 73105
(405) 521-2450
Corrections Agency
Department of Corrections
2400 Martin Luther King Avenue
Oklahoma City, OK 73136
(405) 427-6511
RADAR Network Agency
Oklahoma State Department of Mental Health
1200 Northeast 13th Street,Second Floor
Oklahoma City, OK 73117
(405) 271-8755
HIV-Prevention Program
Department of Health
AIDS Division
P.O. Box 53551
Oklahoma City, OK 73152
(405) 271-4636
Drug and Alcohol Agency
Alcohol and Drug Abuse Programs
Programs Division
P.O. Box 53277
Oklahoma City, OK 73152
(405) 521-0044
State Coordinator for Drug-Free Schools
Comprehensive Health
Oklahoma Department of Education
2500 North Lincoln Boulevard
Oklahoma City, OK 73105-4599
(405) 521-2106
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Oklahoma
Alcohol abuse in Oklahoma affects people from every social class, race, age and gender. Friends and family members of the person with alcohol abuse problems are often the first to notice and seek an Oklahoma alcohol abuse treatment program for their loved one. Many times, the alcoholic does not realize the severity of the problem or denies it. Some signs cannot go unnoticed, such as loss of a job, family problems, or citations for driving under the influence of alcohol. Dependence is indicated by symptoms such as withdrawal, injuries from accidents, or blackouts.
Oklahoma alcohol abuse treatment programs have several factors they use to verify if you or your loved is suffering with alcohol abuse problems. These factors include a maladaptive pattern of substance use leading to clinically significant impairment or distress, as manifested by one (or more) of the following, occurring within a 12-month period:
- recurrent alcohol abuse resulting in a failure to fulfill major role obligations at work, school, home (e.g., repeated absences or poor work performance related to substance use; substance-related absences, suspensions, or expulsions from school; neglect of children or household)
- recurrent alcohol abuse in situations in which it is physically hazardous (e.g., driving an automobile or operating a machine when impaired by substance use)
- recurrent alcohol abuse-related legal problems (e.g., arrests for substance-related disorderly conduct)
- continued alcohol abuse despite having persistent or recurrent social or interpersonal problems caused or exacerbated by the effects of the substance (e.g., arguments with spouse about consequences of intoxication, physical fights)
Most often, alcohol abuse is diagnosed in individuals who recently began using alcohol. Over time, alcohol abuse may progress to dependence. However, some alcohol users abuse alcohol for long periods without developing dependence.
Dependence is suspected when alcohol abuse is accompanied by signs of the following:
- Abuse
- Compulsive drinking behavior
- Tolerance
- Withdrawal
If you are reading this, chances are that you or a loved one has an alcohol abuse problem in Oklahoma. You feel lonely, misunderstood, alienated and confused. The first thing you must realize is that there is hope. There can be a happy future in store for you and your loved ones. Oklahoma alcohol abuse treatment programs are here to help. If it is you with the alcohol abuse problem, making that phone call is the most difficult part of the process. If it is a loved one who suffers with alcohol abuse, an intervention may be necessary to insure that the alcohol abuse goes no further, as it can and does lead to prison, and even death.
Alcohol abuse treatment programs in Oklahoma have the tools available to help overcome problem drinking. A caring professional will put together a combination of programs and treatment that will best benefit you and your family. Alcohol rehab is not a quick fix. It takes time and commitment, but the rewards are outstanding. Imagine a happy life, free of alcohol and the devastating havoc it can cause. This happy life is only possible by contacting help for the person with alcohol abuse problems.
The first part of alcohol rehab in Oklahoma is alcohol detox. The process of alcohol detox (detoxification) from can be potentially harmful. Alcohol detox should be done under medical supervision only. Never try to detox from alcohol without professional medical assistance, because there are both physical and psychological issues that occur and need to be closely monitored by a trained professional in order for the patients to alcohol detox safely. There are countless alcohol detox places in Oklahoma and across the United States. The best licensed alcohol detox facilities and alcohol detox centers are known for making patient safety the #1 priority in their alcohol detox programs.
Alcohol abuse is two pronged. There are the physical causes and effects, and the emotional. It is only by treating both that success can be achieved. The first step is calling for help, and the next is usually cleansing your body of the poisoning effects of the alcohol. It is then, and only then that the emotional causes and effects can be dealt with. One is not complete without the other. Oklahoma alcohol rehab centers treat the entire problem and walk with you through the process. Make the difference today. Change your chaotic life for one of happiness and health.
Year |
Total vs. Alcohol Related Fatalities in Oklahoma |
Tot |
Alc-Rel |
% |
0.08+ |
% |
1982 |
1,054 |
608 |
58 |
523 |
50 |
1983 |
848 |
437 |
52 |
389 |
46 |
1984 |
797 |
382 |
48 |
339 |
43 |
1985 |
744 |
353 |
47 |
301 |
41 |
1986 |
698 |
340 |
49 |
285 |
41 |
1987 |
597 |
254 |
43 |
221 |
37 |
1988 |
638 |
298 |
47 |
258 |
40 |
1989 |
648 |
284 |
44 |
257 |
40 |
1990 |
641 |
284 |
44 |
246 |
38 |
1991 |
652 |
292 |
45 |
252 |
39 |
1992 |
613 |
273 |
45 |
242 |
39 |
1993 |
671 |
284 |
42 |
245 |
37 |
1994 |
687 |
281 |
41 |
240 |
35 |
1995 |
669 |
258 |
39 |
230 |
34 |
1996 |
772 |
295 |
38 |
249 |
32 |
1997 |
838 |
328 |
39 |
291 |
35 |
1998 |
755 |
268 |
35 |
240 |
32 |
1999 |
741 |
258 |
35 |
224 |
30 |
2000 |
650 |
229 |
35 |
194 |
30 |
2001 |
682 |
270 |
40 |
234 |
34 |
2002 |
739 |
251 |
34 |
215 |
29 |
2003 |
668 |
255 |
38 |
220 |
33 |
2004 |
774 |
278 |
36 |
245 |
32 |
2005 |
802 |
283 |
35 |
249 |
31 |
2006 |
765 |
243 |
32 |
201 |
26 |
2007 |
754 |
240 |
32 |
219 |
29 |
2008 |
749 |
274 |
37 |
244 |
33 |
Oklahoma DUI Penalties
First DUI Conviction
- 180-day driver's license revocation
- 10 days-1 year in jail
- Up to $1,000 fine
- Potential drug/alcohol rehab program
- Considered a misdemeanor offense
Second DUI Conviction (within 10 years)
- 1-year driver's license revocation
- 1-5 years in jail
- Up to $2,500 fine
- Potential drug/alcohol rehab program
- Considered a felony offense
Third DUI Conviction (within 10 years)
- Drug and alcohol testing at your expense
- Up to 240 hours of community service
- 3-year driver's license revocation
- 1-7 years in jail
- Up to $5,000 fine
- Up to 240 hours of community service
- Installation of ignition interlock device
- Potential alcohol/drug rehab program
Fourth DUI Conviction (within 10 years) - 1 year of court supervision and drug and alcohol testing at your expense
- Up to 480 hours of community service
- 1-10 years in jail
- Up to $5,000 fine
- Installation of ignition interlock device
- Potential alcohol/drug rehab program
Aggravated DUI (.15 BAC or higher)
- 1 year of court supervision and drug and alcohol testing at your expense
- Up to 480 hours of community service
- Installation of ignition interlock device
Penalties for Refusal
- 180-day driver's license revocation
Oklahoma Alcohol Statistics Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatality Data 2008 Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities: | 244 | Youth Under 21 Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities: | 46 | Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities per 100,000 population | | Total All Ages: | 6.7 | Youth Under 21: | 4.3 | 1998-2008 Percent Change in Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities per 100,000 Population | | Total All Ages: | -0.6 | Youth Under 21: | -2.0 | 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: | 33% | BAC .15+: | 67% | Youth Alcohol Consumption Data 2006-2007 (12-20 Year Olds) Consumed Alcohol in the Past Month: | 24.2% | Binge Drinking in the Past Month: | 16.8% | Arrest Data 2008 Driving Under the Influence | | Under 18: | 233 | Total All Ages: | 18,980 | Liquor Laws | | Under 18: | 453 | Total All Ages: | 3,013 | Drunkenness | | Under 18: | 0 | Total All Ages: | 0 |
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University of Oklahoma to ban alcohol
OKLAHOMA — In the University of Oklahoma student union, students cram for their final exams. But their big test comes next semester when the university bans alcohol everywhere on campus.
More | | Alcohol Involved In Two Oklahoma Traffic Deaths
OKLAHOMA -- Alcohol played a role in two weekend traffic fatalities, according to the Oklahoma Highway Patrol. A a 25-year-old Miami man and a 44-year-old Texas woman were killed on Oklahoma Highways
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Alcohol Treatment Centers by City in Oklahoma Listed Alphabetically: | | Quick Drug Facts |
Recent surveys indicate that driving deaths and injuries are at their lowest point in 38 years. Experts credit less drunk driving, increased use of seat belts, and more state DWI legal limits of 0.08 (compared to 0.10 previously). Is this a trend, or will the deaths and injuries rise again later? Over years, such phenomena tend to wax and wane, but scientists should be studying the exact reasons for improvement in the figures, and try to make safe strategies consistent from year to year.
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Some states place conditions on on-premises bartenders under 21 years of age. These include requirements that a legal-age manager or supervisor be present when the underage person is tending bar and/or that the underage bartender undergo beverage server training beyond that otherwise mandated in the state.
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Youth exposure to alcohol advertising in national magazines has fallen substantially since 2001. However, in 2004, youth were still overexposed to magazine advertising relative to adults. In 2004 youth ages 12 to 20 saw 15% more advertising for beer and 10% more advertising for distilled spirits (the largest category of magazine alcohol advertising) per capita than adults age 21 and over. In this context of general overexposure, African-American youth saw even more advertising for these products in magazines in 2004 than youth in general.
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Alcohol and caffeine are the two most widely abused substances in the world.
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