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Access Washington Logo linking to Access Washington

www.doh.wa.gov

a healthy dose of
information

 

For Parents

Some teens are using prescription pain medicine to get high.

  • According to the Healthy Youth Survey (2010), eight percent of 10th graders used prescription pain medicine to get high in the past 30 days.
  • Because prescription drugs are prescribed by a health care provider and easy to access, many teens falsely believe they are a safe way to get high.
  • There are serious health risks related to abuse of prescription pain medicine. These include impaired judgment and ability to learn, trouble breathing, extreme drowsiness, effects on motor skills, and death from accidental overdose.
  • Prescription pain medicines are also addictive because they impact the same areas of the brain as heroin.

Between 2002 and 2010 in Washington State, the number of teens admitted to state-funded chemical dependency treatment for abuse of prescription pain medicines increased 14 times, from 12 to 191.

What are the potential signs and symptoms of prescription drug abuse?

  • Constricted pupils, slurred speech, or flushed skin.
  • Personality changes, mood swings, irritability, excessive energy, sleepiness or avoiding sleep.
  • Sweating, loss of appetite, forgetfulness, or clumsiness.
  • Missing pills from the medicine cabinet or unfamiliar pills around the house.
  • Secretiveness, loss of interest in personal appearance, borrowing money or having extra cash, skipping classes, or not doing well in school.

What can parents do to prevent their kids from abusing prescription drugs?

  • Educate yourself about medicine that kids are abusing. Share this information with others who are in contact with your children, such as school administrators, coaches, counselors, etc.
  • Talk with your kids. Find out what your kids know about peers using medicine without doctors' orders.
  • Ask your healthcare provider if any medicines prescribed for your family have a potential for abuse.
  • Take an inventory of prescription and over-the-counter medicine in your home. Ask friends and family to do the same. Pay attention to quantities.
  • Keep prescription pain medicine in a locked box, locked file cabinet, fire proof safe, or gun safe.
  • Set clear expectations with your teenagers. Let them know that they should never take medicine without your knowledge.
  • If your child needs medicine during school hours, speak with school officials about their policies for taking medicine at school. If possible, personally take the medicine to the school nurse. Make sure unused medicine is returned to you.
  • Supervise and dispense medicine dose-by-dose.
  • Properly dispose of old or unused medicines. For disposal information, please see the following website:http://www.takebackyourmeds.org/what-you-can-do/locations

For more information:


Need Help?
Call the Washington Recovery Help Line at 1-866-789-1511

 

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Washington State Department of Health
Health Professions & Facilities
243 & 310 Israel Rd SE
P.O. Box 47865
Olympia, Washington, 98504-7865

Last Update : 05/16/2012 01:49 PM
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