|
MEDIA ADVISORY
November 22, 2011
Middle and
high school students learn about dangers
of prescription drug abuse
Four out
five of the top drugs abused by 12th
graders are prescription drugs
|
Jenny Belsky, OMS II, talks with
an Alexander High School
student
at a Nov. 9 outreach event about
medication safety.
|
WHO/WHAT:
Medical student volunteers from the Ohio
University Heritage College of
Osteopathic Medicine (OU-HCOM) and the
OU-HCOM Pediatric Club are visiting
health classes at area middle
schools and high schools to educate
students about medication safety and
prescription drug abuse prevention.
The
medical students perform skits based on
“Generation Rx,” an initiative developed
at the Ohio State University College of
Pharmacy that provides resources for
schools and communities on the topic.
Kaitlyn Kelly, a member of OU-HCOM’s
AmeriCorps/ComCorps program who helped
adapt the program for local use, said
the skits demonstrate scenarios that
students can identify with. One sketch,
for example, depicts an injured
volleyball player who begins relying too
heavily on her Vicodin prescription.
Following the performances, the medical
students moderate a group discussion on
the possible consequences of abusing
prescription drugs.
WHY:
The New York Times
reports that drug overdoses in Ohio
have more than quadrupled in the last
decade. Further, southern Ohio counties
have had the highest unintentional
prescription medicine overdose death
rates in the entire state, according to
2004-2008 Ohio Department of Health
statistics.
Rep. Terry Johnson, D.O. ('91),
OU-HCOM Centers for Osteopathic Research
and Education assistant dean and
director of the family medicine
residency program at Southern Ohio
Medical Center in Portsmouth,
experienced the problem here in
Appalachia while working as a coroner.
The problem was so widespread, he
co-sponsored legislation
targeting
prescription medicine abuse in the
state, and in May 2011, Gov. John
Kasich signed the legislation into law.
With
four of the five top drugs abused by
12th graders being prescription drugs,
according to a 2010 report by the Ohio
Prescription Drug Abuse Task Force,
reaching students is key. The OU-HCOM
outreach to area health classes is aimed
at helping them understand the
consequences of abusing prescription
drugs: short and long-term health
conditions ranging from stroke to memory
loss; physical harm due to accidents,
sexual or physical abuse; social or
emotional problems; and legal issues.
“Abusing
prescription medication might seem safer
to a high schooler than cocaine or
another street drug,” Kelly said, “but
it’s still really dangerous and can be
deadly.”
WHEN/
Nov. 30,
Athens Middle School
WHERE:
January 2012, Trimble High School
CONTACT:
For more information about the
program and for photos from
a Nov. 9
event with Alexander
High School health classes, please
contact Richard Heck, writer/editor, OU-HCOM Office
of Communication, 740.593.0896,
heckr@ohio.edu. |