Pubdate: Wed, 08 Mar 2000 Source: Daily Gazette (NY) Copyright: 2000 The Gazette Newspapers Contact: P.O. Box 1090, Schenectady, NY 12301-1090 Fax: (518) 395-3072 Website: http://www.dailygazette.com/ Author: Marnie Eisenstadt, Gazette reporter Bookmark: MAP's link to New York articles is: http://www.mapinc.org/states/ny CAFFEINE PILLS TAKEN AT SCHOOL COBLESKILL - Between 10 and 15 seventh-grade students were sent home from Cobleskill-Richmondville's Golding Middle School Tuesday after they took caffeine pills. Most of the students were picked up by their parents, but an ambulance was called toward the end of the day for a student experiencing chest pain and shortness of breath. Some parents also ended up taking their children to the emergency room at Bassett Hospital of Schoharie County after picking them up from school, said Bruce Loveys, the school's dean of students. School officials found out about the students taking the drug just before noon, when a few students who had not taken the pills came forward and said they were concerned about their friends, Loveys said. He said that once he and Principal David Palmer found out that a large group of students shared the pills, the school called Bassett's emergency room to find out what to do. Upon the hospital's recommendation, the school nurse monitored the heart rates and blood pressures of students until they were picked up by their parents. Loveys said it is possible that students also had taken the pills on Monday. Although administrators were fairly certain the students had ingested caffeine pills, many of those who took the pills did not know what they were. "That was scary," Loveys said. He said that although caffeine is not a controlled substance, the students who took it still were in violation of the school's disciplinary code. Students can bring in aspirin or antibiotics for their own use, but they are prohibited from sharing drugs with others. Letters telling parents about the incident were sent home Tuesday. In the letter, administrators also asked parents to speak to their children about the dangers of taking pills without the guidance of an adult. Cobleskill village police were brought in to investigate the incident early in the afternoon. Officer John Sullivan said that the students shared one bottle of Eckerd's Extra Strength Alertness Tablets, which contain 200 milligrams of caffeine each. He said the students had taken about 20 of the 40 pills in the bottle. Because the drugs are sold over the counter, the students committed no crime, Sullivan said. - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst