Pubdate: Tue, 15 Apr 2003 Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2003, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.fyitoronto.com/torsun.shtml Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/457 Author: Kevin Connor HOMEBREW HIGH Kids Mixing Over-The-Counter Drugs Pharmacists need to crack down on the growing problem of kids making non-prescription drug cocktails to get high, says a leading druggist. Kids are going online and finding recipes for mixing over-the-counter drugstore products into potions to get stoned -- and it's landing too many of them in emergency wards, said Donnie Edwards, a board member with the Ontario Pharmacists Association, yesterday. Edwards is urging pharmacists to get into the schools and tell kids how dangerous recreational non-prescription drug use can be. "Education is the key," he said. 'It's Quite Scary' Pills containing codeine are being crushed and snorted or mixed with water and injected, Edwards said. Gravol, for instance, is being taken in large quantities as a hallucinogen. Combinations of sleeping aids and cold remedies are also used to get a high. Abusing over-the-counter drugs can cause heart problems, breathing troubles and even comas, he said. "They are cheap and easily accessible. Non-prescription doesn't mean it's safe. It's quite scary what some kids will do. One kids does it and the next kid wants to try it," Edwards said. It's a dangerous problem, said Eva Janecek, of the Addiction Research Foundation. "You can overdose on antihistamines and die," she said. "These products shouldn't be so openly displayed." Pharmacists should ask why a youngster is buying non-prescription drugs, said Jeff Greenstein, druggist at Beech Pharmacy in the Beaches. "Abusing these drugs can cause serious depression. That's the last thing you want in an adolescent, with all the things they already have to deal with," Greenstein said. "These are potent drugs. You need caution. Parents need to talk to their kids and know what is in their medicine cabinet." - --- MAP posted-by: Alex