Abuse of prescription drugs by teens has been increasing, and teens are often obtaining these drugs from home medicine chests or their friends. When a person gets addicted, the answer is an effective rehabilitation program that eliminates the desire to use drugs.
While figures for some kinds of drug use among teens have
dropped slightly over the last several years, prescription drug abuse shows no
signs of letting up. Supporting this abuse is the ease with which our young
people can lay their hands on prescription drugs to abuse, particularly
prescription pain relievers such as hydrocodone, often marketed as Vicodin.
A recent report from the National
Center on Addiction and Substance
Abuse at Columbia
University shows that one-third
of teens who know prescription drug abusers say that these kids get their drugs
from home. Another third say they can get these drugs from a friend or
classmate.
The annual survey of teen attitudes on substance abuse drew
the conclusion that probably half of all prescription drugs being abused by
teens are coming from someone’s home medicine chest.
And this ease of acquisition showed in the statistics on
prescription drug abuse. By 2007, one in every twenty high school seniors had
found and tried OxyContin, a powerful narcotic painkiller with a high, when
abused, similar to heroin. While this is bad enough, the statistic of seniors
who had abused Vicodin, a painkiller containing hydrocodone, was almost twice
as high.
“Prescription pain relievers like hydrocodone and oxydcodone
are addictive, whether it’s teens or adults abusing them,” stated Derry
Hallmark, Director of Admissions and a Certified Chemical Dependency Counselor
at Narconon Arrowhead. Narconon Arrowhead is one of the country’s leading drug
and alcohol rehabilitation centers, located in Canadian, Oklahoma. “We help people of all ages, from
eighteen to seventy-five and up, recover the drug-free life they lost. Seventy
percent of our graduates remain drug-free after graduation, as a result of our
holistic program that addresses the three main barriers to recovery: the
cravings, guilt and depression experienced by every addict.”
<p>If you know anyone who needs help to overcome a
drug addiction, please contact
<a href="http://www.stopaddiction.com">
Narconon Arrowhead</a>
</p>
| Additional articles about Drug Addiction |
|
|
| About the author |
Drug Counselor |
| Please Rate This Article |
Number of ratings: 0
Rating: 0