1 / 56

Benito Parent Information Night

Benito Parent Information Night. Drugs and Other Harmful Substances Presented by Dr. Glickin Parent and PTSA Member May 2, 2006. ADOLESCENT DRUG ABUSE. EVERYTHING OLD IS NEW AGAIN. “Children today are tyrants. They contradict their parents, gobble their food, and

pascha
Télécharger la présentation

Benito Parent Information Night

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Benito Parent Information Night Drugs and Other Harmful Substances Presented by Dr. Glickin Parent and PTSA Member May 2, 2006

  2. ADOLESCENT DRUG ABUSE EVERYTHING OLD IS NEW AGAIN

  3. “Children today are tyrants. They contradict their parents, gobble their food, and tyrannize their teachers”

  4. Socrates (469-399 BC)

  5. “Where did you go?” I did not go anywhere” “Why do you idle about, go to school” “Do not wander about in the public square, would you achieve success?” “Your grumblings have put an end to me, you have brought me to the point of death”

  6. This is a piece of a conversation between a Sumerian youth and his father, recorded in cuneiform some 3 or 4 thousand years ago.

  7. Since 2002, the number of students who attend middle schools where drugs are used, kept or sold has jumped 47% 28% of middle school students attend drug infected schools 2.4 million middle schoolers 10.6 million high schoolers National center on addiction and drug abuse

  8. Prescription drug abuse has tripled over the past decade

  9. Meth addicts increased by 57% since 2001

  10. From 2004-2005 • Prescription drug abuse has jumped 86% • The use of ecstasy is up 28% • The use of acid, cocaine, or heroin is up 20%

  11. Up to half of young people may have experimented with illegal drugs or solvents by the time they are 16 www.mind.org.uk

  12. WHY DO CHILDREN START USING ILLEGAL DRUGS The pressure of everyone else using them, the need to fit in Curiosity, rebelliousness To feel better: relief of stress or depression Drugs are easily available Mostly because they are offered the opportunity by friends they trust

  13. TOBACCO : biggest killer (400,000 deaths per year) ALCOHOL: most widely abused legal substance PRESCRIPTION DRUGS METHAMPHETAMINE MARAJUANA: most widely abused illegal substance MDMA (ECSTASY) CRACK COCAINE HEROIN STEROIDS INHALANTS The top 10

  14. TOBACCO • 3000 teens a day start smoking • 1,000,000 a year • 60% of high school seniors have tried

  15. Nearly all smokers start between the ages of 13-18 Nearly none start after 20

  16. ALCOHOL

  17. Data as recently as 4/25 indicate that alcohol remains the most common reason for substance abuse treatment

  18. Its use is associated with about 40% of the 43,000 traffic deaths that occur yearly madd

  19. ALCOHOL The average age when kids first try alcohol is 11 years for boys and 13 years for girls.  The average age at which Americans begin drinking regularly is 15.9 years old. 80% of high schoolers have tried alcohol

  20. It has been estimated that over three million teenagers are out-and-out alcoholics.  Several million more have a serious drinking problem that they cannot manage on their own.

  21. If a teen starts to drink at 15, he has a 40% chance of alcoholism as an adult

  22. There is a genetic risk for addiction, like heart disease, diabetes, and cancer

  23. PRESCRIPTION DRUGS • Frequency of abuse is increasing • Most commonly abused Opioids: used to treat pain CNS depressants: used to treat anxiety and sleep disorders Stimulants: used for ADHD

  24. In 1999, 4 million people were using prescription • drugs non medically • 2.6 million pain relievers • 1.3 million sedatives and tranquilizers • 0.9 million stimulants • The sharpest increase in new users was • 12-17 year olds • Girls were more likely than boys to abuse • in this age group, especially the depressants • and tranquilizers • NA/AA recovery zone

  25. These are often stolen from parents or obtained from physicians

  26. Opoids • Referred to as “narcotics” Morphine Codeine OxyContin Darvon Vicodin Dilaudid demerol

  27. CNS depressants • Barbituates used for anxiety, tension, sleep disorders pentobarbitol • Benzodiazapines anxiety, stress, panic attacks, sleep disorders valium, xanax, libruim,

  28. Stimulants • Used for ADD and obesity Dexedrine Ritalin adderall

  29. METHAMPHETAMINE • A chemical variation of amphetamine, or “speed” with a much stronger effect on the brain • It is extremely addictive and difficult to quit

  30. Crystal meth is a popular form of methamphetamine produced by easily by mixing several ingredients pseudoephedrine (a cold remedy) paint thinner ammonia ether Drano lithium from batteries

  31. CRYSTAL METH • $150 investment can yield $10,000 worth of the drug • Is easily made in home labs • Is the most popular form of the drug • Frequently used in the rave scene • Dealers will give out free samples in order to hook new customers

  32. Use causes an immediate “rush” which is intense, short lived, and can lead to rapid addiction Can cause permanent brain damage and death

  33. MARIJUANA More teens are in treatment for marijuana than for all other drugs combined

  34. Marijuana paraphernalia

  35. It’s not “only marijuana” any more. More potent Younger kids using and experimenting

  36. There is no way to know which experimenters will go onto addiction, and which will not

  37. Club drugs

  38. Ecstasy • Has stimulant (amphetamine) and hallucinogenic (LSD) like properties • Introduced to increase empathy between couples in marriage therapy • Available in pill, suppository, injectable, and inhaled form • 250 cases in 1994, 2850 in 1999 • Increases heart rate, blood pressure, body temperature, brain damage and death • Often associated with involuntary teeth clenching Drug Abuse warning network

  39. Ketamine • Used as a sedative in animals and humans • Causes dream like states • Popular at raves • Liquid, powder, or smoked • 19 cases in 1994, 396 in 1999 Drug abuse warning network

  40. GHB • A depressant • One of the date rape drugs • Initially available in health food stores as a muscle builder • Looks like water • Can be powder or capsule • Added to alcohol • 55 cases in 1994 • 2973 cases in 1999 Drug abuse warning network

  41. Rohypnol • Valium like • “roofies” another date rape drug • Can cause 8-24 hours of amnesia • No longer available in the US, but available in Mexico and overseas • 13 cases in 1994, 624 in 1998, 540 in 1999 Drug abuse warning network

  42. COCAINE • Highly addictive • Inhaled, injected or smoked • Remarkably prevalent in our community

  43. CRACK COCAINE Cocaine that been processed to be smoked

  44. Cocaine pipe, dish scrub, lighter

  45. Inhalants • Cheap and readily available in the home • Paint thinners, art supplies, dry cleaning fluids • Butane, propane, whipping cream aerosols, hair sprays, deodorants • Effects are like getting drunk

  46. WHAT’S A PARENT TO DO?

  47. Kids themselves say that losing their parents’ trust and respect are the most important reasons not to use drugs

  48. National Center on Addiction and Drug Abuse, 8/05 Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse Joseph Califano Jr., former Secretary of HEW “...survey reveals that teen perceptions of immorality, parental disapproval and harm to health are far more powerful deterrents to teen smoking, drinking and drug use than legal restrictions on the purchase of cigarettes and alcohol or the illegality of using drugs like marijuana, LSD, cocaine and heroin.”

  49. Children who were warned about alcohol by their parents and children who reported being closer to their parents were less likely to start drinking. • Lack of parental support, monitoring, and communication have been significantly related to frequency of drinking, heavy drinking, and drunkenness among adolescents.

More Related