Pubdate: Tue, 10 Sep 2002 Source: News-Enterprise, The (KY) Copyright: 2002 News-Enterprise Contact: http://www.newsenterpriseonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1663 Author: William Wilczewski PROGRAM WILL GIVE PARENTS, PROFESSIONALS TOOLS TO FIGHT USE OF INHALANTS They're in your house and child's school. And the last time you went shopping, it's likely you bought one. They are legal, but inhalants are also killers. That's why Harvey Weiss, executive director for the National Inhalant Prevention Coalition, will be canvassing Hardin County on Thursday speaking to professional treatment and prevention providers, parents, school staffs and youth services professionals about the dangers of ingesting fumes and chemicals. "It's like playing Russian roulette, because just one use can prove fatal," Weiss said. "We speak to 100 to 125 parents a year who tell us their children have died" from inhalant abuse. One in five students in America has used an inhalant to get high by the time he or she reaches the eighth grade, according to the NIPC Web site. Abuse can result in death, brain damage, loss of muscle control and destruction of the heart, kidney, liver, blood and bone marrow. With that in mind, the Kentucky Army National Guard, which is co-sponsoring the seminars, approached Weiss to make the appearances. "I sense that there's a great need for education about inhalants around the state," Weiss said. "It is the first substance a young person will try, and that includes alcohol and tobacco." The adult-only seminars, titled "Inhalants: The Silent Epidemic," will also be sponsored by Elizabethtown's Communicare Regional Prevention Center. "We are seeing nationally, and at the state and local levels, a trend that inhalant use is on the increase, so we want to do what we can to get the word out," said Kelly Harl, prevention director at Communicare. "We're also seeing kids start to use at a younger age." The focus of the seminars, Harl said, is to raise awareness in the community and to reach a broad range of the area's adults who have daily interaction with kids. "We want to educate people about the signs and symptoms associated with the abuse," she said. "By educating them, we hope to reduce the chances of our young people ever getting started." - --- MAP posted-by: Alex