http://www.cannabisnews.com/
Pubdate: Sun, 29 Oct 2000
Source: Boston Globe (MA)
Copyright: 2000 Globe Newspaper Company.
Contact:  P.O. Box 2378, Boston, MA 02107-2378
Feedback: http://extranet.globe.com/LettersEditor/default.asp
Website: http://www.boston.com/globe/
Author: Patricia Wen

'AS EASY TO GET AS CANDY'

A New Massachusetts Study Finds Wide Teen Abuse Of Ritalin

NEWTON - At 13, the girl knew precisely why so many classmates darted into 
the school nurse's office in the late morning: There, they swallowed their 
daily doses of Ritalin pills to help them concentrate.

That year, she was on Ritalin, too. But instead of a visit to the nurse's 
office, she got her pills through the black market that operates out of 
school bathrooms and hallways, often for $1 to $5 a pill. And, instead of 
swallowing the pills, she crushed them and snorted them through her nose to 
get high.

"It's as easy to get as candy," said the teenager, now 15, who spoke on the 
condition of anonymity while attending an adolescent drug treatment program 
in Newton.

The candy reference is apt. Outside Watertown High School last week, some 
students called the pills, which come in blue, yellow, and white, 
"Skittles," a reference to the colorful miniature candy balls.

The easy availability of Ritalin - largely from other students diverting 
their medical prescriptions - has public health officials worried that the 
drug is becoming a popular adolescent approach to tripping, not treatment.

The state now has preliminary figures to back up officials' fears. In a 
survey of 6,000 public school students in Massachusetts in the last school 
year, nearly 13 percent of high school students said they had used Ritalin 
without a prescription at some time in their lives.

Among middle school students in the seventh and eighth grade, slightly more 
than 4 percent of youngsters admitted to a non-medical use of Ritalin at 
some time.

Researchers can't say if the percentages are up or down, because this is 
the first state study of illicit use of Ritalin. While the pills clearly 
don't have the adult-like allure of marijuana or alcohol - both considered 
"gateway" drugs because they can lead to the use of harder ones - Ritalin 
is still a threat. Teenagers abuse Ritalin at rates similar to inhalants 
and cocaine, both highly popular substances.

"It's a substantial figure," said Thomas Clark, a research associate at 
Health and Addictions Research Inc., a nonprofit health research firm that 
conducted the state survey. "The number should be a wake-up call to how 
much prescription drugs, including Ritalin, are being used recreationally 
by teens."

At the same time, the illicit Ritalin market has another danger: Students 
who have a prescription for the drug to control concentration problems 
aren't getting the treatment they need if they're selling their pills. 
Generally, the pills must be taken every four hours during the school day.

Few reliable national statistics exist on Ritalin use among teens, though 
some studies suggest anywhere from 2 to 3 percent of today's high school 
students have tried Ritalin at least once in the past year. In the recent 
Massachusetts survey, about 4 percent of high school students said they had 
used unprescribed Ritalin at least once in the past year.

These numbers come at a time when even the legal use of Ritalin is being 
questioned.

Congress has held hearings on the issue, and class-action suits against the 
drug have been filed in several states, led by some parents and 
psychologists who say the diagnostic criteria for attention-deficit 
disorders are so broad that nearly every feisty child qualifies.

Clearly, many children who have trouble focusing in the classroom have 
benefited from the drug, but there's been a growing backlash by some 
parents and members of the medical establishment who say Ritalin is a 
pharmacological quick-fix for schools and families that don't have time to 
deal with complex behavioral issues.

With US production of Ritalin at nearly 15,000 kilograms a year, an 
eight-fold increase from a decade ago, and about 2 million Americans on 
this drug (overwhelmingly children), critics say more of today's youths 
need patience - not pills - to see them through their tough times.

Still, some local teens who are aware of Ritalin's illicit market say they 
have taken the drug legitimately for attention-deficit disorder and found 
it very helpful.

"I could stay focused more," said a 12-year-old Arlington girl while 
shopping last week. "My grades improved a lot."

While Ritalin clearly calms many people with attention-deficit disorder - 
through a chemical mechanism that remains little understood - it acts as a 
stimulant for most people. In fact, methylphenidate, as it is also called, 
can produce an emotional high or a caffeine-like jolt, which many college 
students take advantage of at exam-cramming time.

Drug-abuse specialists appear to be of two minds on the potential threat of 
Ritalin as a new "gateway" drug for the young. On one hand, the popularity 
of Ritalin seems limited by the fact that many teenagers appear to regard 
it as a kind of substitute drug for their first choices, such as marijuana 
or Ecstacy, also known as MDMA.

To achieve an intense high, some teens say they need to snort Ritalin, also 
nicknamed Rids, which causes them to worry about physical damage such as 
nose bleeds from snorting the drug.

"I'd take pot over Rids any day," said one 17-year-old boy, who also spoke 
at the drug treatment center, Sameem Associates, in Newton. "Why ruin your 
nose over Rids?"

Nevertheless, Ritalin is easy to get, especially for those who live in a 
middle-class suburb where families are more likely to seek treatment for 
attention-deficit disorder.

New Hampshire, Vermont, and Massachusetts rank first, third, and eighth, 
respectively, among the top 10 states for Ritalin prescriptions.

While marijuana, cocaine, Ecstacy, and other substances require teenagers 
to have underground connections to drug dealers, Ritalin's distinction is 
that any child with a prescription has the potential to be a dealer. Just 
slip a pill into their pocket to take to school, and they have something to 
peddle.

A Watertown ninth-grader said he noticed a huge difference between middle 
and high school. Because many high school students are entrusted with their 
own medicine, "they have prescriptions, but they sell the pills."

Ritalin is under the tightest controls in pharmacies. In fact, federal law 
prohibits doctors from including refills in its prescriptions and orders 
cannot be phoned in, even by doctors.

Now, law enforcement officials want to restrict what happens when Ritalin 
gets into the hands of patients. Norfolk District Attorney William R. 
Keating said his drug staff is starting to alert high school groups to 
Ritalin abuse.

The US Drug Enforcement Administration is in the process of completing a 
brochure for school nurses, asking them to keep all Ritalin in locked 
cabinets and calling on school staff members to witness each child with a 
prescription actually swallowing the pill before leaving the nurse's office.

Gretchen Feussner, a DEA pharmacologist, said it's important to limit the 
illicit supply of Ritalin, particularly in the early teen years.

"Kids often start experimenting with drugs around seventh grade, or at 12 
years old," she said. "And they will experiment with drugs that are 
available to them."

Edward M. Hallowell, a Concord psychiatrist who has written extensively 
about Ritalin's potential benefits, said users need to know that, if 
abused, the drug can cause serious side effects, including high blood 
pressure, heart racing, and insomnia.

The medical dangers of Ritalin are well documented. Each year, from 1995 to 
1998, federal figures show about 2,000 emergency-room admissions for drug 
abuse that involved patients who mentioned taking Ritalin, either alone or 
with other drugs. In these years, about half the cases involved people 
under 17.

In an attempt to keep Ritalin out of the hands of school children, some 
health officials have applauded this fall's debut of a drug called 
Concerta, a form of Ritalin that lasts for 12 hours, three times as long 
the traditional pill. This form allows a student to avoid a visit to the 
school nurse, with all pills taken at home.

DEA pharmacologist Feussner pointed out, however, that Concerta also has 
risk precisely because it is more potent. She fears that this new, powerful 
pill may become more glamorous to teens.

"This drug could be crushed and snorted and be viewed as even more 
attractive," she said. "It may just pose other problems for us."
- ---
MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens