Source: Daily Record, The (NJ) Contact: http://www.dailyrecord.com/ Copyright: 1998 Gannett Satellite Information Network Inc. Pubdate: 2 Oct 1998 Author: Alisa Dornfest Daily Record Note: Item number 23 of 26 in the series "Heroin: A Clear and Present Danger" YOUR KID CAN BE AN ADDICT Parents must be alert, experts say Drug addiction can begin anywhere -- even in a grocery store. At age 10, Stephanie Ferraro bought two cans of whipped cream while on a family vacation at the Jersey Shore and sucked the nitrous oxide from the nozzle. That seemingly innocent supermarket trip sparked the evolution of a curious pre-adolescent into a drug addict. Stephanie, a Mendham resident and now 15, has been in a drug rehabilitation program for four months battling her craving for cocaine. Her father, Bob, was able to get her help before she advanced to heroin use. She is one of 65 teen drug addicts being treated at Daytop Village in Mendham Township. While there's no magic formula to ensure children will remain drug-free, counselors and other experts said there are things parents can do to deter drug use: keep track of their children each hour, provide outlets for fun, give them enough money for what they need and ask for receipts to justify purchases. One surefire way is to look out for warning signs such as sucking on a whipped cream nozzle. "It runs the gamut because it affects everyone so differently. Trust your instincts. If you think it is, it is," Boonton High School Principal Ken Hart said. No one becomes an addict overnight, counselors said. And heroin users can also be blond, blue-eyed teenagers, once the image of wholesome youth. "Parents in Morris County like to pretend that heroin is still a drug for the middle-aged male laying on the streets of Newark or New York. It's not - -- it's here," said the Rev. Joseph Hennen, executive director of Daytop. He said when the drug treatment center opened in 1992, only two of the 85 inpatients were treated for heroin addiction. This month there are 15. On an average, Daytop has 70 teenagers between 13 and 19 years old receiving treatment for various drug addictions on an in-patient basis, and 20-25 being treated as outpatients five days a week. Inpatients receive intensely supervised individual, group and family psychotherapy daily. The sessions are somewhat confrontational, Daytop Assistant Administrator Jim Curtin said. Outpatients attend school and therapy at Daytop but go home in the evenings. Teenagers who are treated solely by outpatient therapy tend to suffer relapses, medical officials said. Often health insurance plans insist the addict be treated through an outpatient program because it's initially less expensive, but millions of dollars are wasted because those programs aren't effective enough and the teen eventually winds up being treated on an inpatient basis. "They want them to fail before they pay for inpatient treatment," Randolph High School Student Assistance Counselor Maryalice Thomas said of insurance companies. "It's close to impossible to have an outpatient treatment program to keep a kid in a drug-free environment," Hennen said. Recognizing heroin use can be tricky for parents, counselors said. Use of the drug is not easily detected. Venous track marks from hypodermic needles, the most common physical sign, can be hidden in areas such as the groin, between toes, the outer corner of the eye, on the tops of feet and in women, vaginally, medical officials said. New strains of the drug also make it easier to snort and smoke heroin, masking obvious signs. "Heroin is a very insidious drug. Parents may not see any major changes," said Gregg Benson, chemical dependency program administrator of St. Clare's Hospital/Boonton Township. Parents generally don't realize something is amiss, Hennen said, until their children have been addicted for about two years. "In the beginning you're a nice person and you're functioning. By the time you spot weight loss, it's far down the road and your kid is gone," he said. Detecting warning signs early may prevent further use. Parents should look for erratic sleep habits, change in friends and hobbies, missing cash and valuable items and pasty complexions. Asthma-like symptoms -- a runny nose, shortness of breath and watery eyes -- are also warning signs, counselors said. Often, addicts claim to be suffering from hay fever or asthma, so if a child has never been diagnosed with those ailments, be suspicious, counselors said. A parent who suspects their child is using heroin should contact a rehabilitation center for a drug assessment, Hennen said. Urine tests won't rule out drug use because items available in health food stores or on the Internet easily mask the drug screening. Vomiting and nausea are two of the earliest physical signs, school counselors said. Some addicts will claim that they have a gastrointestinal bug. "It's not a stomach virus. It's withdrawal," Thomas said, adding teenage addicts also tend to fall asleep during school. Montville community policing officer Letitia Cook warns parents to keep close tabs on money and items with resale value. Often addicts steal to support the habit. A bag of heroin -- about one dose -- sells for $7 to $20 on the street. It's likely parents won't notice a few dollars missing from wallets or purses, she said. "If they're not rich, they're thieves," Hart said of heroin users. Identifying heroin use during rebellious teenage years is extremely difficult. As youngsters hit puberty, their personalities sometimes change. It is during that period that many teenagers begin drug use. Since heroin has a calming effect on the personality, it is easy to confuse post-puberty changes and drug use. "Parents think, `Oh my God, my kid has gone through a crisis and I finally got him back,'" Hennen said. Ryan Carter of Scotch Plains began smoking pot when he was 12, mostly because he thought it was cool. His mother, Diane Heath, said she noticed specific changes. "Before, he'd be home for dinner and all of a sudden he wouldn't be," she said. Ryan's grades also began to slip and his sleep became erratic as he moved on to harder drugs such as cocaine and angel dust. "One of the things I began to hear all the time is `I don't care.'" After seven months in a rehabilitation program, Carter advises other teens. "The nerd in school who everyone makes fun of, that's who everyone should try to be. Be the kid with the pocket protector. He's in Harvard while I'm in Daytop." - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski