foolsgold
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Aug 11, 2010
- Messages
- 12,899
You want to keep your teenagers safe. You tell them about the dangers of smoking and drinking and walking dark streets and getting lifts from friends who are drunk. You take a deep breath and talk about safe sex. But how much do you talk about drugs?
"We get it at school," they say.
"You get what at school?" you say in complete panic.
"Drugs education. All the time."
The trouble is, I know so little. Cannabis is much stronger than it used to be, apparently. When I was a teenager, it was illegal, made you laugh and made you hungry, but no one suggested it had long-term consequences.
Nowadays, it's linked with schizophrenia. A recent study even suggested that those who start using cannabis under the age of 18, while their brains are still developing, end up with a lower IQ.
According to figures just released by the Office for National Statistics, the number of deaths from drugs (both legal and illegal) in 2011 has gone down very slightly from 2010. Heroin (with other opiate drugs) is still the biggest killer, accounting for over half of all deaths from drug poisoning.
But what about all the rest? This is a fast-moving world. A new survey from the drugs information service FRANK reveals that 86% of parents (nearly all of us) know very little (or absolutely nothing at all) about the new drugs called legal highs.
If you, like me, have a sneaking suspicion that your knowledge is way out of date, see how you score in the following mini quiz:
1. Have you heard of
a) Ivory Wave
b) Benzo Fury
c) MDAI
or
d) none of these?
2. Can you buy legal highs
a) on the internet
b) in the high street
c) at music festivals
or d) not really sure?
3. Are legal highs
a) safer than illegal drugs
b) less safe than illegal drugs
c) more dangerous when mixed with alcohol, or
d) I have no idea?
If you answered all ds, read on.
Basically, legal highs are chemical compounds created in labs that mimic existing recreational drugs.
So if cannabis and cocaine are illegal, manufacturers try to get as close to them as possible with substances that haven't yet been classified as illegal. This makes buying and selling much easier.
Legal highs have been around for a while. In 2010 M-CAT or Mephedrone, which the papers called meow meow, was implicated in the deaths of six people. It's now been made illegal in this country.
But a new report from the Home Office, published in May this year, found that since 2011 new legal highs have been appearing in the UK at a rate of more than one a month.
If you buy them on the internet, you can't necessarily trust the label. Nearly a fifth of all samples tested contained cutting agents and drugs like cocaine. As the report says, "Just because a substance is labelled 'legal' does not mean that it is legal. Neither is it a guarantee that it is safe...The contents of a package are probably not 'what it says on the tin'."
This summer, there has been growing anxiety because these legal highs are very easy to get hold of but seem, in some cases, to produce violent and unpredictable reactions.
In June, the Daily Mail carried the story of Katie Wilson, 19, from Deeping St James, Lincolnshire, who took the legal high Benzo Fury and then walked naked through a local branch of Tesco, kicking a police officer who tried to arrest her.
Fined £200 by magistrates, she said, "I'm so embarrassed about it, I'm just horrified that it made me become something I'm not...It is very dangerous and it can do you real damage – I don't want others to make the same mistake I did."
More seriously, Alex Herriot, 19, a student from Edinburgh university, died in June this year after taking Benzo Fury at the RockNess festival in Scotland.
In a statement, his family said, "Alex was not a habitual drug user. We know that young people dabble in drugs and Alex had been warned to steer clear. Please, please be aware that certain drugs can kill and please don't be the next youngster to leave their family bereft."
The best advice to teenagers, said David Liddell of the Scottish Drugs Forum in a report on Alex's death in The Guardian, is to avoid legal highs at all times.
"There's no easy solution to any of it," he said. "We know that the chemical laboratories of China and elsewhere probably have ten new compounds to bring on stream. It's a moving target. No one has yet come up a better way of dealing with this."
So what are we parents to do? Basically the answer, as always, is to find out the facts. The FRANK website is a good starting point. (Although I must admit that the long list of drugs I had never heard of made me wonder whether I'd been living on a different planet for the past 20 years.) Or you can ring them on 0800 77 66 00 for confidential advice 24 hours a day.
As FRANK says, the most important thing you can do is to talk to your teenagers. Remind them that just because drugs are legal, it doesn't mean that they're safe.
"They can contain a range of potentially dangerous chemicals, and their make-up changes all the time, so you can never be sure what's in them and what effects they'll have."
Alcohol can be dangerous. But at least we've had thousands of years to get used to its effects. These new drugs are completely unknown.
Who knows what damage they can do?
http://www.parentdish.co.uk/2012/08...w-nothing-about-new-drugs-called-legal-highs/
"We get it at school," they say.
"You get what at school?" you say in complete panic.
"Drugs education. All the time."
The trouble is, I know so little. Cannabis is much stronger than it used to be, apparently. When I was a teenager, it was illegal, made you laugh and made you hungry, but no one suggested it had long-term consequences.
Nowadays, it's linked with schizophrenia. A recent study even suggested that those who start using cannabis under the age of 18, while their brains are still developing, end up with a lower IQ.
According to figures just released by the Office for National Statistics, the number of deaths from drugs (both legal and illegal) in 2011 has gone down very slightly from 2010. Heroin (with other opiate drugs) is still the biggest killer, accounting for over half of all deaths from drug poisoning.
But what about all the rest? This is a fast-moving world. A new survey from the drugs information service FRANK reveals that 86% of parents (nearly all of us) know very little (or absolutely nothing at all) about the new drugs called legal highs.
If you, like me, have a sneaking suspicion that your knowledge is way out of date, see how you score in the following mini quiz:
1. Have you heard of
a) Ivory Wave
b) Benzo Fury
c) MDAI
or
d) none of these?
2. Can you buy legal highs
a) on the internet
b) in the high street
c) at music festivals
or d) not really sure?
3. Are legal highs
a) safer than illegal drugs
b) less safe than illegal drugs
c) more dangerous when mixed with alcohol, or
d) I have no idea?
If you answered all ds, read on.
Basically, legal highs are chemical compounds created in labs that mimic existing recreational drugs.
So if cannabis and cocaine are illegal, manufacturers try to get as close to them as possible with substances that haven't yet been classified as illegal. This makes buying and selling much easier.
Legal highs have been around for a while. In 2010 M-CAT or Mephedrone, which the papers called meow meow, was implicated in the deaths of six people. It's now been made illegal in this country.
But a new report from the Home Office, published in May this year, found that since 2011 new legal highs have been appearing in the UK at a rate of more than one a month.
If you buy them on the internet, you can't necessarily trust the label. Nearly a fifth of all samples tested contained cutting agents and drugs like cocaine. As the report says, "Just because a substance is labelled 'legal' does not mean that it is legal. Neither is it a guarantee that it is safe...The contents of a package are probably not 'what it says on the tin'."
This summer, there has been growing anxiety because these legal highs are very easy to get hold of but seem, in some cases, to produce violent and unpredictable reactions.
In June, the Daily Mail carried the story of Katie Wilson, 19, from Deeping St James, Lincolnshire, who took the legal high Benzo Fury and then walked naked through a local branch of Tesco, kicking a police officer who tried to arrest her.
Fined £200 by magistrates, she said, "I'm so embarrassed about it, I'm just horrified that it made me become something I'm not...It is very dangerous and it can do you real damage – I don't want others to make the same mistake I did."
More seriously, Alex Herriot, 19, a student from Edinburgh university, died in June this year after taking Benzo Fury at the RockNess festival in Scotland.
In a statement, his family said, "Alex was not a habitual drug user. We know that young people dabble in drugs and Alex had been warned to steer clear. Please, please be aware that certain drugs can kill and please don't be the next youngster to leave their family bereft."
The best advice to teenagers, said David Liddell of the Scottish Drugs Forum in a report on Alex's death in The Guardian, is to avoid legal highs at all times.
"There's no easy solution to any of it," he said. "We know that the chemical laboratories of China and elsewhere probably have ten new compounds to bring on stream. It's a moving target. No one has yet come up a better way of dealing with this."
So what are we parents to do? Basically the answer, as always, is to find out the facts. The FRANK website is a good starting point. (Although I must admit that the long list of drugs I had never heard of made me wonder whether I'd been living on a different planet for the past 20 years.) Or you can ring them on 0800 77 66 00 for confidential advice 24 hours a day.
As FRANK says, the most important thing you can do is to talk to your teenagers. Remind them that just because drugs are legal, it doesn't mean that they're safe.
"They can contain a range of potentially dangerous chemicals, and their make-up changes all the time, so you can never be sure what's in them and what effects they'll have."
Alcohol can be dangerous. But at least we've had thousands of years to get used to its effects. These new drugs are completely unknown.
Who knows what damage they can do?
http://www.parentdish.co.uk/2012/08...w-nothing-about-new-drugs-called-legal-highs/