DRUG EFFECTS
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News/Information/Articles |

Manchester teen charged in drug death A Manchester teen is facing life in prison for providing a high school honors student ...
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Access to prescriptions increases Getting high can be as easy as opening up the medicine cabinet.
For the first ...
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Teen drug use probed B.C. health researchers hope a new study will help them find out what leads some ...
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Spotlight on teens at risk Drinking and drug use among teens is getting fresh attention in the Pentucket Regional School ...
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Covert drug tests allow parents to check on teens Experts disagree onthe sneaking of hair samples from kids
If your teenage son or daughter ...
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Prescription for Disaster Last week, President Bush announced a strategy to crack down on the abuse and diversion ...
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Theft and drug addiction Chances are you know someone who has had their car or home broken into, or ...
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Drug prevention and education Helping children and teenagers to "just say no" to drugs becomes a little easier with ...
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ECSTASY DEPLETES BRAIN OF MOOD CHEMICAL Using the recreational drug Ecstasy reduces the amount of a brain chemical that controls mood, ...
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Lethal new drug causes deadly effects BRUSSELS – Belgium’s Ministry for Public Health has warned against the dangers of a lethal ...
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Methadone Treatment Investigated Following the death of a 24-year-old University of Montevallo student from methadone, Alabama authorities have ...
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Meth Lab Problem in West Virginia It's definitely going to take a team effort to put secret meth labs out of ...
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Drug Facts
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Methadone mimics many of the effects of opiates such as heroin.
Since about 1990, GHB (gamma hydroxybutyrate) has been abused in the U.S. for its euphoric, sedative, and anabolic (body building) effects. It is a central nervous system depressant that was widely available over-the-counter in health food stores during the 1980s and until 1992.
Crystal meth effects are similar to those of cocaine but with more power and intensity.
Research in humans suggests that chronic ecstasy use can lead to changes in brain function, affecting cognitive tasks and memory. Ecstasy can also lead to symptoms of depression several days after its use.
Heroin effects many parts of the human body, including blood vessels that lead to the lungs, liver, kidneys and brain.
Research suggests that people who used ecstasy at least 25 times had lowered serotonin levels for as long as a year after quitting.
The effects of alcohol are experienced differently for each individual depending on their size, sex, body build, and metabolism.
The short-term physiological effects of cocaine include constricted blood vessels; dilated pupils; and increased temperature, heart rate, and blood pressure.
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Teen drug use probed
B.C. health researchers hope a new study will help them find out what leads some kids to just experiment with drugs, tobacco and alcohol while others become addicted.
"It'll look at what are the risk factors that shift kids from experimenting with drugs to more problematic use. During adolescence, the brain is very vulnerable to addiction," said Dr. Chris Galliford Richardson, a University of B.C. researcher who has received more than
$1 million in funding for the study from the Canadian Institute of Health Research.
The study is to commence in the fall of 2009. It will follow between 5,000 and 10,000 kids through high school, asking them to fill out online surveys every six months.
The students will be asked questions on health as well as such topics as physical development, social situations, substance abuse, self-esteem, risk-taking, sensation-seeking, independence, depression and stress.
While the current funding will support the study for three years, if it meets with success, more money might be made available to follow the students all the way through high school.
"This is one of the first large cohort studies focusing on substance use and psycho-social development in adolescence in Canada," Richardson said.
Gender -- which Richardson defines as "what's between your ears" versus sex as "what's between your legs" -- will also be looked at.
The survey will be introduced in the schools, but kids who drop out will hopefully be kept on board through contact via e-mail and networking websites such as Facebook.
That's one advantage of using the Internet to conduct the research, Richardson said. Other advantages include access to kids in rural and remote areas and the flexibility and low cost of the survey.
The researchers will work with school and health authorities to find practical ways of implementing what they learn from the study data.
"The big one is giving feedback both to schools and parents on what are the big risk factors for substance use," Richardson said.
Eventually, the online survey may analyze each student's input and provide personalized health resource recommendations.
"Here's some feedback to help with making it through high school, because it is such a stressful time," said Richardson, "That's where we really see it going in the future."
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