Pubdate: Sat, 08 Jul 2006 Source: Newark Advocate, The (OH) Copyright: 2006 The Advocate Contact: http://www.newarkadvocate.com/customerservice/contactus.html Website: http://www.newarkadvocate.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2634 Author: Donna Leinwand, USA Today and Kimberly Dick, Advocate Reporter Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) PHARMING FAD ON RISE Prescription Pill-Popping Parties Are Increasing Among Youth Drug counselors across the United States are beginning to hear about pill-popping parties, which are part of a rapidly developing underground culture that surrounds the increasing abuse of prescription drugs by teens and young adults. It's a culture with its own lingo: Bowls and baggies of random pills often are called "trail mix," and collecting pills from the family medicine chest is called "pharming." Pharm parties are "simply everyone pooling whatever pills they have together and having a good time on a Saturday night. Kids ... don't think about the consequences," said Carol Falkowski, director of research communications for the Hazelden Foundation. Central Ohio Drug Enforcement Task Force Capt. Bruce Myers said he doesn't know of any type of prescription medication not being abused in Licking County. He said Percocet commonly is abused. "I think you're going to see a lot of kids involved in it because younger and younger kids are experimenting with prescriptions they can get their hands on," Myers said. "Maybe from their parents, maybe their grandparents." Myers said they are starting their drug experimentation with what is readily available to them. Prescription pills have become popular among youths because they represent a more socially acceptable way of getting high than taking street drugs, Falkowski said. In a 2005 survey by the Partnership for a Drug-Free America, 19 percent of U.S. teenagers -- roughly 4.5 million youths -- reported having taken prescription painkillers such as Vicodin or OxyContin or stimulants such as Ritalin of Adderall to get high. Vicodin has been particularly popular in recent years; a study by the University of Michigan in 2005 found that nearly 10 percent of 12th-graders had used it in the previous year. About 5.5 percent said they had used OxyContin. Both drugs are more popular among high school seniors than Ecstasy and cocaine. The 2005 partnership survey found more than three in five teens easily can obtain prescription painkillers from their parents' medicine cabinets. Overdoses of prescription and over-the-counter drugs accounted for about one-quarter of the 1.3 million drug-related emergency room admissions in 2004, the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration reported in May. Myers said deaths have occurred in the county from prescription overdoses: one near Reynoldsburg and another near Hebron. "In one case they were properly prescribed," he said. "In the other case they were stolen and friends were passing them around for a high, and ultimately one of them died." A tricky part of the prescription-drug problem is addressing the perception among youths that pills are safe because they are "medicine," said Catherine Harnett, chief of demand reduction for the Drug Enforcement Administration. Many teens don't equate taking such pills with using drugs such as heroin or cocaine, Harnett says. "If you start with pills, it seems fairly sanitary and legitimate," she says. "Kids have been lulled into believing that good medicine can be used recreationally." Myers said he doesn't doubt pharm parties and gatherings like them have occurred in the area, but he couldn't cite any specific examples. "It's something we need to spend more time working on, it really is," Myers said. "It's just the staffing level that we have to work with, not the number of cases to work." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman