Asked by twin
Infer How can illicit drug use by one person affect people who do not use drugs? briefly
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GPT-5 mini
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- Health risks from secondhand exposure (smoke, vapors, or accidental contact with potent drugs like fentanyl) or from infections spread by shared needles (HIV, hepatitis).
- Increased risk of being injured or killed in drug-related violence, thefts, or impaired driving crashes.
- Family harm: neglect, abuse, emotional trauma, financial instability, and disrupted caregiving for children or elders.
- Economic costs: lost work productivity, higher insurance and healthcare expenses, and strain on social services and emergency responders.
- Household danger from production sites (e.g., meth labs) that contaminate homes and pose fire/toxic risks to others.
- Community effects: reduced neighborhood safety, property values, and increased public spending on policing and rehabilitation.
- Risks to unborn children if a pregnant person uses drugs, causing long-term developmental problems for the child.
- Increased risk of being injured or killed in drug-related violence, thefts, or impaired driving crashes.
- Family harm: neglect, abuse, emotional trauma, financial instability, and disrupted caregiving for children or elders.
- Economic costs: lost work productivity, higher insurance and healthcare expenses, and strain on social services and emergency responders.
- Household danger from production sites (e.g., meth labs) that contaminate homes and pose fire/toxic risks to others.
- Community effects: reduced neighborhood safety, property values, and increased public spending on policing and rehabilitation.
- Risks to unborn children if a pregnant person uses drugs, causing long-term developmental problems for the child.
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