Pubdate: Fri, 07 Sep 2001
Source: National Public Radio (US)
Show: Morning Edition
Copyright: 2001 National Public Radio
Contact: http://www.npr.org/contact/
Website: http://www.npr.org/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1296
Anchor: Bob Edwards
Guest: Meena Hartenstein, high school senior, Berkeley, California; her 
commentary was produced by Youth Radio

ABUSE OF PRESCRIPTION DRUG VICODIN BY HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS

Bob Edwards, host: Health researchers say that over the past decade a 
growing number of college and high school students experimented with 
prescription medicines and abused them.  Some students swap or sell Ritalin 
to help them stay focused and awake. Another prescription drug, OxyContin, 
has gotten a lot of attention lately because it's very effective for 
killing pain, but potentially very dangerous when people take it to get 
high.  A less potent painkiller called Vicodin also is making the rounds 
among young people.  Youth Radio's Meena Hartenstein says at her California 
high school, Vicodin is the drug of choice.

Meena Hartenstein: At my high school, it's easier to get Vicodin than 
Children's Tylenol. Getting the school nurse to help you get rid of a 
headache requires signing a waiver and calling your parents.  Most teens 
don't want to bother with that, so they grab a few painkillers from 
friends. Last fall, a friend of mine had elbow surgery.  He was prescribed 
a lot more Vicodin than it turned out he needed, so he gave the leftover 
drugs to his girlfriend, who suffers from migraines. That's how it starts. 
Vicodin numbs you to the pain and soon that numb feeling is something you 
want again.

At my small private school, my friends and I are always stressed about 
grades and getting into college.  We stay up all night doing homework or 
cramming for tests.  For some kids, the mellow high from Vicodin is the 
perfect release from all the stress.  Vicodin is prescribed to every 
teen-ager I know who gets his or her wisdom teeth pulled, so a lot of kids 
have easy access to it.  But some never even use the pills they get. I have 
a bottle sitting at home from dental surgery.  I've never given it away or 
sold it, but I know people who get as much as 50 bucks for their bottles of 
pills.  Rich kids with good reputations who wouldn't smoke pot take Vicodin 
because they think it doesn't make them druggies.  Vicodin is 
different.  It's the medication of choice for kids whose moms take Valium 
to relax.

But I worry about the side effects of Vicodin, especially that nasty side 
effect called addiction.  And people my age know it's addictive, because we 
see it on TV.  We've seen that big stars like Melanie Griffith and Matthew 
Perry had to go into rehab for Vicodin addiction. Even on MTV, there's 
Eminem with a Vicodin tattoo.

This is not the kind of drug you find in urban settings, like the 
Haight-Ashbury drug clinic in San Francisco.  But Vicodin is something 
school nurses across the country say they are starting to pay attention to, 
along with other prescription drugs.  It seems like doctors should wonder 
where their pills are headed when they prescribe to teen-agers. And if you 
ask me, parents should also be worrying about Vicodin. Instead of just 
keeping an eye on the liquor supplies, they should also be looking in the 
medicine cabinet.

Edwards: Meena Hartenstein is a high school senior who lives in Berkeley, 
California.  Her commentary was produced by Youth Radio.
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MAP posted-by: Beth