Pubdate: Wed, 13 Sep 2006 Source: Brock Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2006 Brock Citizen Contact: http://www.mykawartha.com/ka/news/brock/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3539 Author: Erin Hatfield REGION TACKLING DRUG USE IN TEENS One poor decision can have tragic consequences when it comes to drug use. Durham residents were once again reminded of that with the recent death of a 15-year-old Ajax girl who had consumed ecstasy. When such an event occurs, calls to the Region's health department increase, said Heather Tucker, a public health nurse with Durham's injury-prevention program. Ms. Tucker said five per cent of youth are using or have experimented with drugs such as ecstasy. Although five per cent seems low, she said, that represents 4,000 kids in Durham. Ecstasy is made in illicit labs with chemicals that vary from location to location. What is sold as ecstasy often contains unknown drugs or other fillers such as caffeine, ephedrine and amphetamine. "The perception is drugs like ecstasy are not harmful drugs," she said. "They think ecstasy is a party drug but it is not a hard drug." A major factor in many ecstasy-related deaths is dehydration and overheating. Ecstasy increases body temperature, blood pressure and heart rate, which can lead to kidney failure, strokes and seizures. According to an Ontario student drug use survey, the average age for first-time use of alcohol or tobacco is 13. "We are concerned that may be lowering," Ms. Tucker said. The survey also showed the use of cigarettes and LSD are at an all-time low and that the use of alcohol, marijuana, barbiturates, hallucinogens, heroin, PCP, methamphetamine and glue were significantly lower in 2005 as compared to peak use. "Most kids are making good decisions when it comes to drug use," Ms. Tucker said. "We need to give that 95 per cent credit for making good choices." - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine