The Baltimore (B'More) Youth Summit on Opioid Awareness aims to promote healthy choices and educate students about the dangers of opioid use. We encourage parents to utilize the resource links below and learn more about this growing epidemic.

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  Facts about Opioids:

  • In 2016, 1,488 Maryland residents died from an overdose in just 9 months.**

  • Heroin and opioid dependency has more than doubled in Maryland over the last decade.***

  • The number of deaths in Maryland related to heroin and opioid drug dependency has increased by more than 100 percent in the last five years.***

  • In December, 2015, an order was issued that allows Maryland-licensed pharmacists to dispense naloxone without a prescription to anyone trained and certified under the Department’s Overdose Response Program.

  • In the United States, at least half of all opioid related deaths involve a prescription opioid.

  • In 2015 in the United States, 276,000 adolescents (12 to 17 years old) were current nonmedical users of pain reliever, with 122,000 having an addiction to prescription pain relievers.*

  • In 2015, an estimated 21,000 adolescents in the United States had used heroin in the past year, and an estimated 5,000 were current heroin users. Additionally, an estimated 6,000 adolescents had heroin a heroin use disorder in 2014.*

  • People often share their unused pain relievers, unaware of the dangers of nonmedical opioid use. Most adolescents who misuse prescription pain relievers are given them for free by a friend or relative.*

  • The prescribing rates for prescription opioids among adolescents and young adults in the United States nearly doubled from 1994 to 2007. *

     

           *American Society of Addiction Medicine: Opioid Addiction 2016 Facts and Figures

           **Maryland Department of Health

    ***Maryland’s Heroin and Opioid Emergency Taskforce  

 

Know the Signs

Many parents are often reluctant to believe that their children may misuse or develop an addiction to prescription opioids. But anyone who experiments with these powerful medications is at risk for negative consequences, including overdose and addiction.

Signs your child may be abusing or misusing opioids:

  • Pills or medication bottles are missing from your home

  • Taking medication in excess of how it has been prescribed

  • Abrupt changes in their finances

  • Dramatic mood changes

  • Lower grades, changes in friends, or changes in sleep or appetite

  • Loss of concern about appearance

  • Physical signs such as fatigue, confusion, weight loss, slurred speech, dizziness and changes in pupil size

SOURCE: MA DPH, Tips for Protecting Your Kids Against Addiction

How prescription drugs are misused:

  • Taking someone else’s prescription medication. Even when someone takes another person’s medication for its intended purposes (such as to relieve pain, to stay awake, or to fall asleep) it is considered misuse.

  • Taking a prescription medication in a way other than prescribed. Taking your own prescription in a way that it is not meant to be taken is also misuse. This includes taking more of the medication than prescribed or changing its form—for example, breaking or crushing a pill or capsule and then snorting the powder.

  • Taking a prescription medication to get high. Some types of prescription drugs also can produce pleasurable effects or “highs.” Taking the medication only for the purpose of getting high is considered prescription drug misuse.

  • Mixing it with other drugs. In some cases, if you mix your prescription drug with alcohol and certain other drugs, it is considered misuse and it can be dangerous.

    SOURCE: National Institute on Drug Abuse for Teens

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Resources for More Information

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