Pubdate: Fri, 08 Feb 2002 Source: Springfield News-Leader (MO) Copyright: 2002 The Springfield News-Leader Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1129 Website: http://www.springfieldnews-leader.com/ Author: Claudette Riley 3 STUDENTS TREATED AFTER INGESTING PILLS Principal: Five Eighth-Graders At Hickory Hills Involved In Drug Incident. Three eighth-grade Hickory Hills Middle School girls were rushed to a hospital Thursday after apparently ingesting prescription drugs. The three - including one who reportedly brought the pills to school - were treated and released Thursday afternoon from Cox Medical Center North, officials said. "It's serious. You can tell them to say no all you want but often the person who offers them drugs is a friend or a friend of a friend," Principal Kelly Allison said. "It's not some guy standing in a long trench coat in a dark corner. It's really never like that - it's someone you know." Allison said a total of five students face disciplinary action in the matter including a 10-day suspension. The eighth-grade girl suspected of providing the prescription drugs - considered a controlled substance in the district's zero-tolerance policy - faces a suspension of up to 180 days. The medication was prescribed to treat seizures, said Tom Lindsey, deputy director of school security. "It was a scheduled narcotic so it's handled as a law violation," said Lindsey, who didn't release the name of the prescription drug. "Students cannot possess a controlled drug at school. They could not only hurt themselves but pass it out to others and serious side effects could happen from allergies to an overdose." The possible 10-day suspensions may be reduced to five days if students agree to counseling. The students - four girls and a boy - may be notified of the disciplinary action as early as today. "It's all in process," Allison said. "We'll talk to parents and let them know the outcome." An hour before school dismissed at 2:45 p.m., Allison noticed a girl acting ill and disoriented in the hallway. He quickly walked her to the nurse's office and starting asking questions. "She wasn't throwing up but she didn't look well," he said. "She started talking and we looked for the others. They appeared to be a little light-headed, dizzy and had slurred speech." Staff members called an ambulance and the parents of all five eighth-grade students. "The parents were notified," Allison said. "They were all surprised." Students were briefly interviewed by school officials and security officers Thursday. "We will have the opportunity to sit down with them later," Allison said. "The saddest part is that for a few of the kids, they will be heroes. When they come back, everyone will ask them what happened." Many Hickory Hills students participate in an anti-drug campaign. Health classes also discuss and warn against the dangers of drugs. School officials said there's been a slight boost in marijuana violations this year. But infractions involving prescription drugs are stable. "It's not uncommon that we have an incident once a year where several students are involved," Lindsey said. "But there isn't a trend." Elizabeth Page, PTA president at Hickory Hills, said the reported drug violations Thursday took her by surprise. "You have a group, a percentage of kids, who do make these choices," Page said. "You try to talk to them and try to be up front with them but it's hard." Page said parents are vital to the anti-drug campaign. "We've talked about it since they were little bitty," she said. "I've taken a very hard line approach that it's very ridiculous, it can be harmful to your health and it could take future choices away from you." Melissa Haddow, executive director of Community Partnership of the Ozarks and involved in anti-drug information campaigns, said experimentation with prescription drugs can lead to other substances. "It can start with something as innocuous as a No Doze, an over-the-counter type of pill," Haddow said. "But if they like that feeling they are more than likely to move on to harder things." She is worried that kids don't know the impact of drugs. "They are playing with fire," Haddow said. "These drugs can have serious effects if you take too many of them and you don't know what you are doing." If it is not an isolated incident, they will launch a campaign to educate students, Haddow said. Haddow offered a warning to parents. "You need to keep those things locked up or on your person," Haddow said. "Kids will experiment and they don't know what they are doing." - ----------- News-Leader reporter Angela Wilson contributed information to this story. - --- MAP posted-by: Alex