Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
Life

'Teenagers using anti-anxiety, sleeping pills to get high'

Darpan News Desk IANS, 25 Nov, 2014 10:47 AM
    Doctors may inadvertently be creating a new generation of illegal, recreational drug users by prescribing anti-anxiety or sleep medications to teenagers, say University of Michigan researchers.
     
    Teenagers prescribed anxiety or sleep medications are up to 12 times more likely to abuse those drugs than those who have never received a prescription, often by obtaining additional pills from friends or family members, the findings showed.
     
    Nearly nine percent of the 2,745 adolescent study participants had received a prescription for anxiety or sleep medications during their lifetime, and more than three percent received at least one prescription during the three-year study period.
     
    "I recognise the importance of these medications in treating anxiety and sleep problems. However, the number of adolescents prescribed these medications and the number misusing them is disturbing for several reasons," said Carol Boyd, the study's first author and professor of women's studies.
     
    Anxiety and sleep medications can be addictive or even fatal when mixed with narcotics or alcohol.
     
    "What happened to Australian actor Heath Ledger could happen to any teenager who is misusing these medications, particularly if the teenager uses alcohol in combination with these drugs," Boyd added.
     
    Ledger died from combined drug intoxication involving prescription drugs in 2008.
     
    Examples of anti-anxiety medications include Klonopin, Xanax and Ativan; sleep medications include Ambien, Restoril and Lunesta.
     
    "These are controlled substances partly because of their potential for abuse and it is a felony to share them," Boyd said.
     
    The researchers recommend better education for parents and adolescents prescribed these medications, monitoring refills and making it standard practice to provide teenagers with a substance use assessment before prescribing these drugs.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Specks returned from space may be alien visitors; team suspects 7 grains are interstellar dust

    Specks returned from space may be alien visitors; team suspects 7 grains are interstellar dust
    Scientists say seven microscopic particles collected by NASA's comet-chasing spacecraft, Stardust, appear to have originated outside our solar system. If confirmed, this would be the world's first sampling of contemporary interstellar dust.

    Specks returned from space may be alien visitors; team suspects 7 grains are interstellar dust

    Do you lose happiness over friends' better sex life

    Do you lose happiness over friends' better sex life
    Do you feel less happy when you learn that your friend is more sexually active than you and enjoying a better sex life? Do not go by what he/she...

    Do you lose happiness over friends' better sex life

    A prescription to enjoy super 'medical marriage'

    A prescription to enjoy super 'medical marriage'
    Are you married to a doctor and not been able to achieve fulfillment both at home and at work? Don't worry as researchers have carefully...

    A prescription to enjoy super 'medical marriage'

    Want to be happy? Cut down on consumption

    Want to be happy? Cut down on consumption
    Are you working extra hard to earn more money with the hope that more spending power would make you happier? Think again!

    Want to be happy? Cut down on consumption

    Music training makes kids better learners

    Music training makes kids better learners
    Providing your kids with the opportunity to learn a musical instrument or to sing strengthens their reading and language skills, says a study....

    Music training makes kids better learners

    Diversity at workplace seen differently

    Diversity at workplace seen differently
    People's views about diversity of an organisation or team depends on whether or not members of their own race are included, says a study....

    Diversity at workplace seen differently