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L. RON HUBBARD | A PROFILE
Narconon
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To date, L. Ron Hubbard’s drug rehabilitation methods are at work in some fifty nations and credited with salvaging tens of thousands of otherwise terminal addicts from drug dependence. Most notably, his methods are the mainstay of an international drug rehabilitation network known as Narconon. It is globally arrayed and internationally renowned for the fact Narconon consistently demonstrates at least three times the success rate of all other drug rehabilitation programs. Moreover, those successfully completing the program are not only drug-free, but also felony-free. If the point in any way seems obvious, it is not. Witness a seminal study revealing that 73 percent of those addicted to drugs also sold drugs. Following the completion of other rehabilitation programs, 37.9 percent continued dealing drugs. Among a similar group of addicts completing the Narconon program, not a single graduate trafficked in drugs. Likewise, whereas other programs were able to reduce drug-related robberies to 32.3 percent, those completing the Narconon program no longer committed any such crimes whatsoever.
It is no wonder, then, that the Narconon program is accredited by the prestigious Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF) as the benchmark for all rehabilitation programs. Exclusively based on L. Ron Hubbard’s drug rehabilitation technology, the Narconon materials and program help thousands of hard-core addicts free themselves from the enslavement of drugs.
For the complete body of information on Mr. Hubbard’s solutions to epidemic drug abuse see the L. Ron Hubbard Series edition, Humanitarian: Rehabilitating a Drugged Society.
opiates: any drug made from or containing opium. Opium is an addictive drug prepared from the juice of a poppy. Some opiates are illegal and affect mood and behavior; others are used in medicine for relieving severe pain. Page .
methadone: a powerful synthetic drug developed in the 1940s. Methadone has been used as a substitute drug in the “treatment” of addiction to heroin, but persons using it end up addicted to it. The drug also causes other side effects, for example, affecting breathing and digestion. Page .
die-hard: resistant to any kind of change and reluctant to give up habits, beliefs or attitudes. Page .
benchmark: pertaining to or used as a standard of excellence, achievement, etc., against which anything similar must be measured or judged. Page .
Lake Eufaula: a lake in the eastern part of Oklahoma, a state in the south central part of the United States. Page .