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Jan. 27th, 2009

butterfly

Cold Medicine Abuse DXM


Over the last few weeks Narconon of Georgia has received more reports of cold medicine abuse. This warning is again being re-issued.

 

 

Have a winter cold?

Be careful.  That over-the-counter cold medicine you have in your medicine cabinet may have some
Dextromethorphan (DXM) in it and DXM can make a person high.  You may not know about DXM, but most drug abusers do, so check your medicine cabinet.

 

DXM can produce a high similar to LSD; including hallucinations, vivid dreams, loss of motor control and "out of body" states. This high is described as “robo tripping” by DXM users. It takes an overdose of DXM to produce a high and this overdose can also cause health problems like rapid heart beat, high blood pressure, kidney damage, liver damage, seizures and even death.   This drug is easy to get and emergency rooms are reporting waves of young people who are overdosing on it. Estimates are that over two million teens in the United States have abused DXM products to get high. Often, these teens are finding information about DXM on the internet and then find that it is all too easy to buy DXM products at the local drug store.

 

At Narconon, we have first hand accounts from clients who abused this drug in the past. One reported that the most popular drug containing DXM seemed to leap into his pocket when he was in the drug store. Another told a staff member that he has never quite returned to normal after his extensive abuse of the drug. One client describes how he forfeited a football scholarship due to years of DXM abuse and “robo tripping”.

 

It is sometimes difficult to tell if someone is abusing an over-the-counter medication containing DXM.   Be alert if the person is acting stoned but there is no tell-tale smell. This is a key sign. Other symptoms are:

 

  1. Dilated pupils;
  2. Confusion;
  3. Slurred Speech;
  4. Dizziness;
  5. Loss of coordination.

 

DXM is found in over 140 products. Look for those products that say "DM" or "Tuss".

 

Don't leave it to law enforcement to solve this problem. Drugs with DXM can be bought and consumed in large amounts without any laws being broken. Be alert for theft when you are in a drug store with an abuser or if you work in a retail facility that sells cold medication.

 

 

 

 

 

The best defense against this drug is education. The dangers are real and probably unknown to any would-be- user. This is one of the most dangerous ways to get high and unfortunately the most available.  Anyone about to take this stuff for fun needs to know it could kill them.     Let’s pass the word.

 

 

 

 

 

Mary Rieser CCDC

Executive Director

Narconon of Georgia 

 

narcononhelp@yahoo.com) with questions or visit our web site http://www.drugsno.com

 

Copyright © Narconon of Georgia Inc. All rights reserved. Narconon and the Narconon Logo are trademarks and service marks owned by the Association for Better living and Education International and are used with its permission. Narconon of Georgia is a non-profit 501© public benefit corporation.

 

Oct. 27th, 2008

butterfly

Is DXM In Your Cold And Flu Medicine?


The cold and flu season is here.


Be careful. That
over-the-counter cold medicine you have in your medicine cabinet may have some Dextromethorphan (DXM) in it and DXM can make a person high. You may not know about DXM, but most drug abusers do, so check your medicine cabinet.


The best defense against this drug is education
. The dangers are real and probably unknown to any would-be- user. This is one of the most dangerous ways to get high and unfortunately the most available. Anyone about to take this stuff for fun needs to know it could kill them.


At Narconon, we have first hand accounts from clients who abused this drug in the past. One reported that Coricidin (the most popular drug containing DSM) seemed to leap into his pocket when he was in the drug store. Another told a staff member that he has never quite returned to normal after his extensive abuse of the drug. The theft of drugs containing DXM is at an all time high.


DXM can produce a high similar to LSD; including hallucinations, vivid dreams, loss of motor control and "out of body" states. This high is described as
robo tripping by DXM users. It takes an overdose of DXM to produce a high and this overdose can also cause health problems like rapid heart beat, lethargy, high blood pressure, kidney damage, liver damage seizures and even death. This drug is easy to get and emergency rooms are reporting waves of young people who are overdosing on it. Estimates are that over two million teens in the United States have abused DXM products to get high. Often, these teens are finding information about DSM on the internet.


It is sometimes difficult to tell if someone is abusing an
over-the-counter medication containing DXM. Unlike heroin, methamphetamine and cocaine, it is difficult to test.  Be alert if the person is acting stoned but there is no tell-tale smell. This is a key sign. Other symptoms are:

  • Dilated pupils
  • Confusion
  • Slurred Speech
  • Dizziness
  • Loss of coordination

While Coricidin is the most popular of the abused over-the-counter-medications, DXM is found in over 140 products. Look for those products that say "DM" or "Tuss".


Don't leave it to law enforcement to solve this problem. Drugs with DXM can be bought and consumed in large amounts without any laws being broken. Be alert for theft when you are in a drug store with an abuser or if you work in a retail facility that sells cold medication.


IF YOU KNOW SOMEONE ABUSING DXM OR ANY DRUG, CALL US AT

877-413-3073. WE HAVE A 70% SUCCESS RATE!


You may reply to this email (narcononhelp@yahoo.com) with questions or visit our web site http://www.drugsno.com


Copyright © Narconon of Georgia Inc. All rights reserved. Narconon and the Narconon Logo are trademarks and service marks owned by the Association for Better living and Education International and are used with its permission. Narconon of Georgia is a non-profit 501© public benefit corporation.

Oct. 8th, 2008

butterfly

What’s In Your Medicine Cabinet and Who is it For?

 

If you have cough or cold medicine for a child in your medicine cabinet, you should know that last year about 7000 kids went to the emergency room from overdoses of cold medicines. Most of these overdoses occurred because parents could buy the stuff over the counter and give it to their kids without any real understanding of the potential harm. 

 

These products bring in 286 million a year for the drug companies that sell them. With that much money to lose, industry “experts” are suggesting that we need to educate the parents – perhaps with online pharmacology classes?

  

The real answer lies with those pediatricians who are taking charge of their young patients and putting pressure on the FDA to remove over the counter cough medication. Hopefully they will take back the reigns and guide kids safely through their colds. As mentioned in this article, usually it just takes rest and plenty of liquids. When I was a kid, grandma and her chicken soup seemed to speed up the process.   If that didn’t work then my mother would call the doctor, who would carefully instruct her regarding any medication. She was a teacher – she wasn’t trained in pediatrics and I am grateful that she wasn’t given the opportunity to monkey around with my health.

 

The jump from kid cough syrup to robo tripping with DXM cold products is not a big jump. (Robo tripping is taking so much of a cold product with DXM in it that the person goes on a “trip” – sometimes never to return to normalcy.) Robo trippers often start with the cold products from home and then start stealing the product to maintain their habit.

 

What’s in Your Medicine Cabinet today could be making the drug addict of tomorrow. 

 

Get educated.

 

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/124028.php

 

Call Narconon 877-413-3073 for more information. Narconon is an effective drug treatment program. We are the New Life Program.

May. 29th, 2008

butterfly

Youths risk death in latest drug abuse trend /By Donna Leinwand, USA TODAY

Youths risk death in latest drug abuse trend
By Donna Leinwand, USA TODAY

Emergency rooms and schools across the nation are reporting that waves of youths are overdosing on non-prescription cough and cold medicines that are widely available in drugstores and supermarkets.

Dextromethorphan is a common cough suppressant in over-the-counter medicines.
By H. Darr Beiser, USA TODAY

The dozens of overdoses in the past two years — including at least five deaths in which the abuse of over-the-counter medicines was a factor — reflect how medicines such as Robitussin and Coricidin are becoming more popular as recreational drugs for kids as young as 12, police and doctors say.

The incidents represent a dangerous turn from past decades, when some youths would guzzle cough syrup to try to get a buzz from alcohol and codeine, authorities say. Most cough and cold medicines no longer contain alcohol, and those with codeine, an addictive opiate, are available only by prescription. But more than 120 over-the-counter medicines include dextromethorphan, or DXM, a cough suppressant that when taken in heavy doses can produce hallucinations and a loss of motor control, much as PCP does.

About DXM

Dextromethorphan, also called DXM, is found in more than 120 non-prescription cough and cold medicines, including Robitussin, Coricidin HBP, Vicks NyQuil and Vicks Formula 44. Other facts:

Youths' nicknames for DXM: Robo, Skittles, Triple C's, Rojo, Dex, Tussin, Vitamin D. DXM abuse is called "Robotripping" or "Tussing." Users might be called "syrup heads" or "robotards."

Symptoms of abuse: They include sweating; high body temperature; dry mouth; dry, itchy or flaky skin; blurred vision; hallucinations; delusions; nausea; stomach pain; vomiting; irregular heartbeat; high blood pressure; numbness in toes and fingers; red face; headache; loss of consciousness.

How much is too much: A normal dose of DXM is 15 to 30 milligrams. Mind-altering effects can occur at doses as low as 100 milligrams, but many abusers consume enough pills or syrup (say, half a 12-ounce bottle) to result in a dose of 240-360 milligrams.

Its status: The Drug Enforcement Administration classifies DXM as a "drug of concern" because of its potential for misuse, but there are no legal restrictions on buying the drug.

Sources: National Institutes of Health, Drug Enforcement Administration






Kids don't have to drink entire bottles of goopy cough syrup to go "Robotripping" or "Dexing." Pills such as Coricidin HBP Cough & Cold tablets — known as "Triple C's" — offer far more potent doses of DXM with less hassle. Youths can buy the medicines easily, then go to Web sites to learn how much someone of their weight should take to get high.

Whether in cough syrup or pills, DXM costs just a few dollars, is "easy to get ... and there's a lot of information about how to get high on it on the Internet," says Charles Nozicka, medical director of pediatric emergency medicine at St. Alexius Medical Center in Hoffman Estates, Ill., west of Chicago. He says that he began seeing DXM overdoses among teens three or four years ago, and that lately he has seen as many as four cases a week.

Authorities say DXM overdoses typically occur in clusters, as word of the drug spreads in a community's middle schools and high schools. This fall, parents and school officials in Naples, Fla., who had known little about DXM were shocked when several kids in their early teens suddenly passed out in class after overdosing on the drug.

At Pine Ridge Middle School in Naples in September, a 13-year-old girl brought about 80 Coricidin pills to campus one day and gave some to six friends, authorities there say. Each of the friends took at least five pills — the recommended dosage for adults is no more than one pill every six hours — and soon the school was in chaos. Two students lost consciousness in their first-period classes; they and one other overdosed youth were treated at a local hospital.

The girl who distributed the pills thought it would be "fun to feel messed up and act ... drunk," says Cpl. Joseph Scott of the sheriff's office in Collier County, which is in southwestern Florida on the Gulf Coast.

Another round of overdoses occurred on Nov. 6 at Immokalee High School, which also is in Collier County. A 15-year-old girl and two of her friends took five Coricidin pills each before school. By 10:45 a.m., the girl "couldn't remember her own name," Scott says. When paramedics could not stabilize her heartbeat, they called for a helicopter to take her to a hospital. Authorities learned later that she had obtained the pills from a boy who had taken them from his home. The girl's friends did not have to be hospitalized.

Scott says that many parents in Collier County were shaken by the idea that youths could buy large amounts of such a potentially dangerous drug at a local store, and then consume the drug, without breaking any laws. "It's something people aren't really informed about yet. The parents we've dealt with so far are pretty much in shock," Scott says. "It seems right now it's mostly the younger kids" who are taking DXM.

Scott says his office is compiling information packets about DXM that will be distributed to local pharmacies and schools.

Restricting access

Elsewhere, growing concerns about DXM have led some drugstores to restrict access to cough and cold medicines.

After two teenage girls and two 20-year-old men in Merrill, Wis., overdosed on medicines containing DXM this year, some drugstores in the city of about 10,000 people 160 miles north of Madison began to stow such remedies behind their counters. At the Aurora Pharmacy, customers now must request Coricidin tablets, and they aren't allowed to buy several boxes at once. Pharmacist Jim Becker says he wants the drug "where we can keep an eye on it."

Drug manufacturers say they sympathize with concerns about drug abuse, but they have resisted efforts to restrict consumers' access to Coricidin, Robitussin and other remedies containing DXM.

"The vast majority of people take them responsibly," says Fran Sullivan, spokesman for Wyeth Consumer Healthcare in Madison, N.J., which makes Robitussin products. "As a medicine, it works hands-down, so we want people to be able to use it if they need it."

Aware that teens might be tempted to abuse its newest DXM product, anti-cough gel-tabs, Wyeth made its packaging large enough so that it is difficult to stash in a backpack or pocket, Sullivan says. The company advertises on TV shows geared to adults, he says.

"We've noticed that the abuse comes and goes in waves," he says. "It gets really popular in a small area for a short period of time and then it dies out. Teens end up in the emergency room, it makes the local newspaper, and the area goes on alert."

Schering-Plough, which makes Coricidin, is working with the Partnership for a Drug-Free America to create an educational Web site on DXM, company spokeswoman Mary-Fran Faraji says. Company representatives also are meeting with pharmacists, parents, schools and retailers to discuss ways to prevent drug abuse.

But Faraji says Schering-Plough doesn't plan to eliminate DXM from its non-prescription cough and cold medicines. She notes that most of the potential alternatives to DXM as a cough suppressant are opiates that carry more potential for abuse. "Reformulating our product is not going to make the abuse issue go away," Faraji says. "Our product is safe and effective when used as directed."

DXM approved decades ago

DXM, a synthetic drug that chemically is similar to morphine, was approved by the Food and Drug Administration as a cough suppressant in 1954. Drug manufacturers began putting it in cough syrups in the 1970s as a replacement for codeine.

DXM is sold legally without a prescription because it does not make users high when taken in small doses. The recommended dose, about one-sixth to one-third of an ounce of an extra-strength cough syrup, contains 15 to 30 milligrams of DXM, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse. At doses of 4 or more ounces of cough syrup, DXM produces effects similar to those of PCP or the anesthetic ketamine, the institute says. DXM can produce hallucinations, depressed breathing, elevated blood pressure and an irregular heartbeat. Overdoses can cause seizures, comas and death.

It can be particularly dangerous when taken with other drugs.

Lee Cantrell, interim director of the California Poison Control System's San Diego division, says that Robitussin and some other cough and cold remedies containing DXM have additional ingredients that can be fatal to abusers if taken in huge doses. For example, antihistamines, which often are combined with DXM in cough and cold remedies, can be toxic and cause respiratory distress, Cantrell says. He says cough medicine abuse emerged as a problem in California about three years ago.

During what officials called a "mini-outbreak" of DXM overdoses in New Jersey two months ago, a 15-year-old boy had to be treated for acetaminophen poisoning after he drank two bottles of Robitussin and took some Coricidin. Acetaminophen is a pain reliever/fever reducer that, over time, can cause liver damage if taken in large doses.

The federal government does not keep statistics on DXM abuse, but drug specialists say anecdotal evidence suggests that its use does not approach that of methamphetamine or the club drug Ecstasy. DXM abusers, drug specialists say, typically are young teens who are seeking a cheap alternative to drugs that are more expensive and more difficult to get.

Still, "what we see in the emergency department is probably the tip of the iceberg," Nozicka says of DXM abuse in his community near Chicago. "There's probably a lot more going on, but most (overdose cases) don't end up in the emergency room."

Some drug counselors and doctors say young adults have begun using DXM with alcohol, Ecstasy and other drugs.

DXM "looks innocuous enough, but if you take enough of it, it can cause serious problems," says Ed Bottei, medical director of the Iowa Statewide Poison Control Center in Sioux City. A 22-year-old college student in Ames, Iowa, died of a DXM overdose in October 2002. "Even though it's an over-the-counter medicine, it can still hurt you," Bottei says.

Authorities who have been more focused on illegal drugs often have been surprised by sudden outbreaks of DXM overdoses.

After a series of overdoses in the Detroit area in August, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration issued an alert that warned parents, schools and local communities about an "escalation" in DXM abuse.

The alert cited a "disturbing increase" of overdoses in the Grosse Point area, near Detroit.

DEA special agent David Jacobson, spokesman for the agency's Detroit office, says that federal drug enforcement analysts usually can forecast regional trends in drug use, based on geographic patterns. But "Robotripping" came out of nowhere, he says.

"Law enforcement hadn't heard about it, but all the kids had," Jacobson says. As he and others in the community asked around, they found that DXM abuse "was not only out there, but it was out there more than we thought."

Internet fuels trend

Like others who monitor DXM abuse, Jacobson says the Internet has fueled the trend.

"Now (DXM cases) pop up everywhere," he says. "If one kid is doing it anywhere, kids here will know about it."

At Michigan State University in East Lansing, the student health center is planning to include a question about DXM abuse on its next student health survey in the spring, says Dennis Martell, the university's interim coordinator for health education.

"We want to be proactive in identifying the problem before it becomes the rage," he says.

Meanwhile, as word of DXM spreads among teens and young adults, pharmacies are reporting more thefts of cough and cold medicines, as well as suspicious purchases.

Victor Vercammen, a pharmacist who works in a drugstore north of Chicago, says he recently watched two young men try to buy six packages of Coricidin. As the clerk rang up the purchase, Vercammen confronted the pair.

"I could tell as the conversation went on that they planned to misuse it, so I asked if they realized that it could cause a seizure, that it could be fatal," says Vercammen, a spokesman for the Illinois Pharmacists Association. "My hope was that educating them at least gets them to think about it. The popular conception is that because it's over-the-counter, it's safer."

The men left the packages on the counter and walked out.

May. 8th, 2008

butterfly

What is DXM????????????????

Narconon of Georgia wants to educate the public on the dangers of DXM abuse which is contained in many over the counter medications. These are medications that range from fever reducers to cold remedies to heartburn medication. Kids might think it is fun to take, but since overdose can lead to death, we all need to learn about it.

You may not know about DXM, but most drug abusers do, so check your medicine cabinet.

DXM can make a person high. The high can be similar to LSD; including hallucinations, vivid dreams, loss of motor control and "out of body" states. This high is described as robo tripping by DXM users.

It takes an overdose of DXM to produce a high and this overdose can also cause health problems like rapid heart beat, lethargy, high blood pressure, kidney damage, liver damage seizures and even death.

This drug is easy to get and emergency rooms report that there are waves of admissions from abuse of this drug.

Estimates are that over two million teens in the United States have abused DXM products to get high. Often, these teens are finding information about DSM on the internet – without finding out the whole truth. This is dangerous.

At Narconon, we have first hand accounts from clients who abused this drug in the past. One reported that Coricidin (the most popular drug containing DSM) seemed to leap into his pocket when he was in the drug store. Another told a staff member that he has never quite returned to normal after his extensive abuse of the drug.

It may be hard to tell if someone is abusing an over-the-counter medication containing DXM. If a persons is acting stoned, but there is no tell tale smell, they could be abusing DXM. Here are some other signs.

  • Dilated pupils
  • Confusion
  • Slurred Speech
  • Dizziness

If you are a DXM abuser or know one, we can help.

Don’t walk into a party you might not walk out of.

Call Narconon the New Life Drug Treatment Program

877-413-3073

butterfly

November 2009

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