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Pill popping can start when children raid the family medicine cabinet.
Matthew Harris/The Daily Item /


Published February 03, 2009 08:32 am - You might be shocked to learn that you could be your own kid's drug dealer.

Beware of vanishing medicines
Prescription drugs seen as safer than illegal ones

By Wayne Laepple
The Daily Item

You might be shocked to learn that you could be your own kid's drug dealer.

If you've got prescription drugs in your bathroom medicine cabinet, your kids might be abusing those drugs.

"The problem's been there all along," according to Bill Poray, outpatient coordinator at Marworth, a drug and alcohol treatment facility at Waverly, Pa. Poray, a licensed clinical social worker, said the reasons defy explanation.

"We as a society have become more medicated," he said. "Younger people see drugs that will make them feel good, or at least feel better, ASAP."

Prescription drugs such as Ritalin, Aderol, Vicodin and OxyContin, all synthetic opiates, alter the user's mood, he said.

Poray said a number of factors contribute to prescription drug abuse, most of them related to family dynamics.

"It's societal," he said. "Both parents are working, kids are growing up without the attachments vital to their development. The kids are parenting themselves."

Dominc Herbst, president of Bethesda Family Services Foundation in Lewisburg, agreed with Poray.

"We see the effects more than the evidence," he said. "The biggest cause is relational pain from betrayal."

The root causes may be anxiety, detachment, fear, depression or bitterness, or a combination of these factors, Herbst said.

The Pennsylvania Medical Society said two in five teenagers believe that prescription drugs are safer than illegal drugs, and a third of teenagers believe there's nothing wrong with using medicines without a prescription once in a while. Thirty percent believe prescription pain relievers are not addictive, and more than half think using cough medicine to get high is not risky.

"Prescription drugs are not safe when taken by someone else," said Dr. Daniel Glunk, president of the society. "When used as prescribed, medications like painkillers, depressants and stimulants are certainly beneficial, but, in the wrong hands, they can be deadly."

Poray said a preoccupation with the so-called gateway drugs such as nicotine, alcohol and marijuana means that people don't notice prescription drug abuse. More teenagers are abusing prescription drugs than use street drugs such as cocaine, heroin and methamphetamine combined.

Teens will even use the Internet to learn about drugs they may find in their medicine cabinet, but they may not think about the long-term effects of abuse.

Treatment is difficult, he said.



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