Difference between revisions of "Educate Parents on the Risks of Prescription and Non-Prescription Drugs"

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Return to [[ZOOM_MAP_-_Educate_Communities_to_Prevent_First-Time_Use_&_Misuse|Zoom Map - Educate_Communities_to_Prevent_First-Time_Use_and_Misuse]]&nbsp;
Return to [[ZOOM_MAP_-_Educate_Communities_to_Prevent_First-Time_Use_&_Misuse|Zoom Map - Educate_Communities_to_Prevent_First-Time_Use_and_Misuse]]&nbsp;


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= Background =
= Background =


Background content goes here
The risk of a parent’s prescription drugs getting to their children is a real concern that must be addressed by any prevention effort. The Partnership for Drug-Free Kids states “Two-thirds of teens and young adults who report abuse of prescription medicine are getting it from friends, family and acquaintances. Make sure the young people in your life don’t have access to any medications in your home. Follow these three steps to monitor, secure and properly dispose of unused and expired prescription and over-the-counter medicine in your home.”&nbsp;<ref>“Safeguard Against Medicine Abuse: Securing and Disposing Medications.” Where Families Find Answers on Substance Use | Partnership for Drug-Free Kids, drugfree.org/article/secure-dispose-of-medicine-properly/.
</ref>&nbsp;According to the [https://www.samhsa.gov/data/report/2017-nsduh-annual-national-report 2017 NSDUH Annual National Report]: “ An estimated 316,000 adolescents aged 12 to 17 misused prescription pain relievers for the first time in 2017 -- that’s 900 adolescents each day. Approximately 217,000 adolescents aged 12 to 17, misused prescription stimulants for the first time in 2017 – that’s 600 adolescents each day.”&nbsp; Understanding how to keep your prescription medications safe is essential to preventing youth from being able to access them.&nbsp;
 
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= Tools and Resources =
= Tools and Resources =


Solutions and Tools focused on this objective.
== The Partnership for Drug-Free Kids&nbsp; ==
 
= Promising Practices and Case Studies =
 
Examples from communities that have implemented tools focused on this objective
 
= Scorecard Building =
 
Possible Objective Details


Possible Measures
Provides resources on how to address medicine abuse and addiction, with a focus on kids and young people.<ref>https://drugfree.org/</ref>


= Actions to Take =
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Actions for Coalitions
= Promising Practices =


Actions for Individuals
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= Sources =
= Sources =
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Revision as of 11:52, 24 February 2020

Return to Zoom Map - Educate_Communities_to_Prevent_First-Time_Use_and_Misuse 


Brief Description

Background

The risk of a parent’s prescription drugs getting to their children is a real concern that must be addressed by any prevention effort. The Partnership for Drug-Free Kids states “Two-thirds of teens and young adults who report abuse of prescription medicine are getting it from friends, family and acquaintances. Make sure the young people in your life don’t have access to any medications in your home. Follow these three steps to monitor, secure and properly dispose of unused and expired prescription and over-the-counter medicine in your home.” [1] According to the 2017 NSDUH Annual National Report: “ An estimated 316,000 adolescents aged 12 to 17 misused prescription pain relievers for the first time in 2017 -- that’s 900 adolescents each day. Approximately 217,000 adolescents aged 12 to 17, misused prescription stimulants for the first time in 2017 – that’s 600 adolescents each day.”  Understanding how to keep your prescription medications safe is essential to preventing youth from being able to access them. 

 

Tools and Resources

The Partnership for Drug-Free Kids 

Provides resources on how to address medicine abuse and addiction, with a focus on kids and young people.[2]

 

Promising Practices

 

Sources

  1. “Safeguard Against Medicine Abuse: Securing and Disposing Medications.” Where Families Find Answers on Substance Use | Partnership for Drug-Free Kids, drugfree.org/article/secure-dispose-of-medicine-properly/.
  2. https://drugfree.org/