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It is also unique in that it affects more women, particularly middle-class women.

In
general, as enlighten in the document F, which is a poster from the American Society
for the Positive Care of Children, which talks about the effects of opioid abuse on
newborn babies, published in 2018, the opioid crisis is unique in that it affects a
number of "unusual" groups, such as working mothers or newborns who suffer from
withdrawal syndrome at birth because of their mother's drug use during pregnancy:
today, an opioid-dependent child is born every 19 minutes (these babies with
neonatal abstinence syndrome are called "heroin babies").
It is also unique in that it affects more women, particularly middle-class women. In
general, as enlighten in the document F, which is a poster from the American Society
for the Positive Care of Children, which talks about the effects of opioid abuse on
newborn babies, published in 2018, the opioid crisis is unique in that it affects a
number of "unusual" groups, such as working mothers or newborns who suffer from
withdrawal syndrome at birth because of their mother's drug use during pregnancy:
today, an opioid-dependent child is born every 19 minutes (these babies with
neonatal abstinence syndrome are called "heroin babies").
It is also unique in that it affects more women, particularly middle-class women. In
general, as enlighten in the document F, which is a poster from the American Society
for the Positive Care of Children, which talks about the effects of opioid abuse on
newborn babies, published in 2018, the opioid crisis is unique in that it affects a
number of "unusual" groups, such as working mothers or newborns who suffer from
withdrawal syndrome at birth because of their mother's drug use during pregnancy:
today, an opioid-dependent child is born every 19 minutes (these babies with
neonatal abstinence syndrome are called "heroin babies").
It is also unique in that it affects more women, particularly middle-class women. In
general, as enlighten in the document F, which is a poster from the American Society
for the Positive Care of Children, which talks about the effects of opioid abuse on
newborn babies, published in 2018, the opioid crisis is unique in that it affects a
number of "unusual" groups, such as working mothers or newborns who suffer from
withdrawal syndrome at birth because of their mother's drug use during pregnancy:
today, an opioid-dependent child is born every 19 minutes (these babies with
neonatal abstinence syndrome are called "heroin babies").
It is also unique in that it affects more women, particularly middle-class women. In
general, as enlighten in the document F, which is a poster from the American Society
for the Positive Care of Children, which talks about the effects of opioid abuse on
newborn babies, published in 2018, the opioid crisis is unique in that it affects a
number of "unusual" groups, such as working mothers or newborns who suffer from
withdrawal syndrome at birth because of their mother's drug use during pregnancy:
today, an opioid-dependent child is born every 19 minutes (these babies with
neonatal abstinence syndrome are called "heroin babies").
It is also unique in that it affects more women, particularly middle-class women. In
general, as enlighten in the document F, which is a poster from the American Society
for the Positive Care of Children, which talks about the effects of opioid abuse on
newborn babies, published in 2018, the opioid crisis is unique in that it affects a
number of "unusual" groups, such as working mothers or newborns who suffer from
withdrawal syndrome at birth because of their mother's drug use during pregnancy:
today, an opioid-dependent child is born every 19 minutes (these babies with
neonatal abstinence syndrome are called "heroin babies").
It is also unique in that it affects more women, particularly middle-class women. In
general, as enlighten in the document F, which is a poster from the American Society
for the Positive Care of Children, which talks about the effects of opioid abuse on
newborn babies, published in 2018, the opioid crisis is unique in that it affects a
number of "unusual" groups, such as working mothers or newborns who suffer from
withdrawal syndrome at birth because of their mother's drug use during pregnancy:
today, an opioid-dependent child is born every 19 minutes (these babies with
neonatal abstinence syndrome are called "heroin babies").
It is also unique in that it affects more women, particularly middle-class women. In
general, as enlighten in the document F, which is a poster from the American Society
for the Positive Care of Children, which talks about the effects of opioid abuse on
newborn babies, published in 2018, the opioid crisis is unique in that it affects a
number of "unusual" groups, such as working mothers or newborns who suffer from
withdrawal syndrome at birth because of their mother's drug use during pregnancy:
today, an opioid-dependent child is born every 19 minutes (these babies with
neonatal abstinence syndrome are called "heroin babies").
It is also unique in that it affects more women, particularly middle-class women. In
general, as enlighten in the document F, which is a poster from the American Society
for the Positive Care of Children, which talks about the effects of opioid abuse on
newborn babies, published in 2018, the opioid crisis is unique in that it affects a
number of "unusual" groups, such as working mothers or newborns who suffer from
withdrawal syndrome at birth because of their mother's drug use during pregnancy:
today, an opioid-dependent child is born every 19 minutes (these babies with
neonatal abstinence syndrome are called "heroin babies").
It is also unique in that it affects more women, particularly middle-class women. In
general, as enlighten in the document F, which is a poster from the American Society
for the Positive Care of Children, which talks about the effects of opioid abuse on
newborn babies, published in 2018, the opioid crisis is unique in that it affects a
number of "unusual" groups, such as working mothers or newborns who suffer from
withdrawal syndrome at birth because of their mother's drug use during pregnancy:
today, an opioid-dependent child is born every 19 minutes (these babies with
neonatal abstinence syndrome are called "heroin babies").
It is also unique in that it affects more women, particularly middle-class women. In
general, as enlighten in the document F, which is a poster from the American Society
for the Positive Care of Children, which talks about the effects of opioid abuse on
newborn babies, published in 2018, the opioid crisis is unique in that it affects a
number of "unusual" groups, such as working mothers or newborns who suffer from
withdrawal syndrome at birth because of their mother's drug use during pregnancy:
today, an opioid-dependent child is born every 19 minutes (these babies with
neonatal abstinence syndrome are called "heroin babies").
It is also unique in that it affects more women, particularly middle-class women. In
general, as enlighten in the document F, which is a poster from the American Society
for the Positive Care of Children, which talks about the effects of opioid abuse on
newborn babies, published in 2018, the opioid crisis is unique in that it affects a
number of "unusual" groups, such as working mothers or newborns who suffer from
withdrawal syndrome at birth because of their mother's drug use during pregnancy:
today, an opioid-dependent child is born every 19 minutes (these babies with
neonatal abstinence syndrome are called "heroin babies").
It is also unique in that it affects more women, particularly middle-class women. In
general, as enlighten in the document F, which is a poster from the American Society
for the Positive Care of Children, which talks about the effects of opioid abuse on
newborn babies, published in 2018, the opioid crisis is unique in that it affects a
number of "unusual" groups, such as working mothers or newborns who suffer from
withdrawal syndrome at birth because of their mother's drug use during pregnancy:
today, an opioid-dependent child is born every 19 minutes (these babies with
neonatal abstinence syndrome are called "heroin babies").
It is also unique in that it affects more women, particularly middle-class women. In
general, as enlighten in the document F, which is a poster from the American Society
for the Positive Care of Children, which talks about the effects of opioid abuse on
newborn babies, published in 2018, the opioid crisis is unique in that it affects a
number of "unusual" groups, such as working mothers or newborns who suffer from
withdrawal syndrome at birth because of their mother's drug use during pregnancy:
today, an opioid-dependent child is born every 19 minutes (these babies with
neonatal abstinence syndrome are called "heroin babies").
It is also unique in that it affects more women, particularly middle-class women. In
general, as enlighten in the document F, which is a poster from the American Society
for the Positive Care of Children, which talks about the effects of opioid abuse on
newborn babies, published in 2018, the opioid crisis is unique in that it affects a
number of "unusual" groups, such as working mothers or newborns who suffer from
withdrawal syndrome at birth because of their mother's drug use during pregnancy:
today, an opioid-dependent child is born every 19 minutes (these babies with
neonatal abstinence syndrome are called "heroin babies").

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