Wednesday, October 31, 2012

For teen girls, recovery from drugs focuses on self-esteem



What brought me here? You mean all the drugs I used?" asks Crystal.
She is sitting on a folding chair a rehabilitation center. But the defiant set of her mouth is a poor mask for the unresolved emotions that brought her here and still roil within. Growing up in a home marked by violence and drug use, Crystal, now 15, believed she should live up to a different standard: good grades and excellence in sports.
She believed she was failing. So she gave up on herself.
"I didn't like myself. Whatever I could do to change, I wanted to do it," she says flatly. Drugs were her first choice.

Crystal is one among an alarming number of high-school girls who are abusing drugs, most commonly to medicate emotional problems involving body image and self-esteem. An upsurge in girls seeking treatment for addiction - an illness often compounded by an eating disorder - has forced local counseling centers to tailor their treatment strategies to address girls' unique problems.
In studying girls and addiction, researchers have identified a number of issues unique to them. Girls, for instance, become addicted much more quickly than boys.
Crystal is a case in point. "In seventh grade, I started drinking, and then I didn't like that anymore, so I started to smoke weed," Crystal says. "I started throwing up in eighth grade, and I started using K to lose weight. You don't eat when you take it."
Crystal, a pseudonym chosen by the East Setauket, L.I., girl at her parents' request, is referring to ketamine, one of a variety of drugs girls are using to get high and suppress appetites that threaten their chances of living up to the unrealistic standards they see in magazines and on TV.
Tall, ivory-skinned, with long red hair and meticulously applied makeup, Crystal cultivates the appearance of a grownup. But the glittering purple polish on her manicured fi ngernails reveals a more adolescent sensibility. "You look in the magazines and the girls are perfect," she says.
As is the case for many of the girls being treated in the metro area for drugs and eating disorders, the emphasis Crystal placed on looking like a model was a mask for more complicated self-esteem issues. Sniffing K up to seven times a day and smoking cocaine-enhanced marijuana
when she couldn't fi nd ketamine, Crystal came to feel insecure without the drugs.
A little over a year ago, she tried to commit suicide. "Unless I was high, I was depressed," she says simply. "It wasn't me anymore after a while. It was just the drugs."
Crystal's loss of her sense of self is among the particular effects of drugs on girls - and one of the many consequences they must overcome to be successfully treated.
MORE VULNERABLE
Other gender-specifi c realities play into their experience, as well. Girls move faster from experimentation to addiction than boys. They are quicker to get hooked on nicotine, will get drunk faster than a boy who drinks the same amount of alcohol and will experience greater cocaine dependence. They are more likely to suffer Ecstasy-induced brain damage and be hospitalized for prescription-drug abuse. And they often engage in dangerous sexual encounters to pay for their addiction.
"The glamour it gives off is an illusion, because the things you have to do to get it are disgusting," says Jackie, a 16-year-old Staten Island girl being treated at Pennsylvania's Caron Foundation for problems with cocaine and anorexia.
Without a trace of emotion, she ticks them off: "Steal. Pretend I was going to have sex with somebody. Have sex with somebody sometimes.
"I've gotten beat up. I was almost raped four times."
The legal system seems to be recognizing these ripple effects. For example, eighteen-year-old NYU freshman Julia Diaco was arrested last month for selling marijuana. Such recognition may partially account for the growing numbers of girls in drug-treatment programs.
"There's not as much leniency as there used to be, maybe because you see the results - prostitution, pregnancy and suicides,"says Kim Terero, assistant director of Daytop's adolescent program in Huntington.
"The courts are taking a much closer look at the females and what's going on."
The responses of parents and the school system are less uniform. Crystal says she was thrown out of school twice - she was getting C's and D's, skipping class and getting in fi ghts when she was high. But others say many schools are not as firm or as quick to get help for their
students.
"Their parents grew up in the '60s and '70s and the cocaine '80s, and there's not a strong value that using drugs is unacceptable," says Denise Murphy, director of the outpatient adolescent program at Manhattan's Phoenix House. "Out of all the people we offer a spot to, 70% decline the offer because the parents don't feel the use is that bad."
A DIFFERENT AGENDA
Money also is an issue. Sometimes private schools don't force students into treatment because they don't want to lose their tuition, say Murphy and other counselors who work with the city's independent
schools. Although there are not many adolescent-based treatment programs in general and even fewer dedicated to girls' special needs, some facilities are starting to think about how to respond to their female patients, says Susan Foster, vice president and director of policy research analysis at the Center for Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University. While the counseling strategies used to get boys and girls off drugs are the same, both genders need extra attention in specific areas.
For example, counselors might spend more time addressing anger management and sexual compulsivity among boys than they would among girls. Conversely, they might dedicate more time to eating disorders, sexual trauma, depression and other mental illnesses in girls than they would in boys.
They might also counsel them in samesex, rather than coed, groups. Some experts believe girls should be treated by women and boys by men.
"Women, because of our culture, tend to defer to the men and focus on helping the man talk about his own feelings. As a consequence, they'll miss talking about themselves," says Nancy Waite-O'Brien, vice president of clinical services at the Betty Ford Center, which was one of the first facilities to adopt a gender-specific approach to drug treatment.
"The women will try to measure up to what the masculine values are. They'll edit things they perceive as unattractive or things like sexual abuse or physical abuse," she says. "That doesn't happen so much when the women are together. If they're tracking with women, they'll get
something they've never gotten, and that's a woman mentor."
A MORE STUBBORN PROBLEM
Treating accompanying eating disorders often is more challenging. Girls have been bombarded with images of superthin, large-breasted and otherwise flawless women for years, leading to deeply rooted notions of beauty, says Dr. Robert B. Millman, director of drug- and
alcohol-abuse services at New York Presbyterian Hospital. Yet those beliefs don't necessarily go away when girls sober up, especially since getting clean often leads to weight gain.
Moreover, many girls develop an eating disorder almost by accident, either when they take cocaine or amphetamines recreationally, or when they take prescription medications such as Ritalin for attention-deficit disorder or attention-defi cit hyperactivity disorder. All these drugs suppress the appetite, giving girls the unexpected"bonus" of thinness, Millman says.
"Often these drugs do improve their school performance and concentration. While they're feeling the effects, their appetite goes down and they lose weight," Millman says. "When the effects wane
and you get tolerant, your appetite returns with a vengeance.
"It's a complicated issue because many programs have to do with saying, 'I'm powerless over the drugs, I have to stay away from them.' But food is necessary, you can't stay away from the food," he says. "The eating disorder tends to be more resistant to change; it persists when the drug use is taken care of. Many women who had an eating disorder move on and are fi ne. But they'll say they are always conscious of these issues."
Nine months into treatment, Crystal no longer fi ts into pants that once sagged on her hips. Grossed out by her bulimia, she was able, without treatment, to stop throwing up and says she has no interest in doing it again.
But it's unclear how she really feels about her body. "I've been jogging. I'm trying to fi nd other ways to lose weight," she says, then adds, "I could be skinnier, but I feel fine the way I am."
Late at night, Crystal lies awake thinking about the last four years of her life, and she cries. "I could've been dead right now," she says. "I'll be like, 'What did I do? I could have not done that and stayed in
school.'
"This place saved my life, literally," she says. "I'm positive I can stay clean. That's not the hard part. It's dealing with high school and my parents. I can get through that, so I'm hopeful.".
Paradigm Malibu is devoted to the provision of state of the art Teen Drug Treatment, Adolescent Behavioral Health, Mental Health and Emotional Health Treatment. To learn more about our services, please visit our web site at: www.paradigmmalibu.com

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Teen Anxiety



Anxiety is common in teenagers. Of all the mental disorders, teen anxiety disorders are the most common. In this article we will review statistics on teen anxiety, signs and symptoms of teen anxiety, what you can do to prevent teen anxiety, and treatment for teen anxiety.


Your Teens Are at Risk
Teenage years are ones of high stress, difficult decisions, and soaring emotions. The life of a teenager seems oftentimes like a soap opera, with the extreme highs and lows, dramatic outbursts, and the unexplained "silent treatments". Anxiety can result from a broken nail, a lower grade on a test than anticipated, or other seemingly trivial issues. In a world of cell phones, palm pilots, portable television, and other high-powered technology, children learn from a very young age that faster is better. The culture in America promotes a feeling of always having to get ahead, and this reflects on teenagers especially, who are still impressionable children trying to be adults. They are looking to the media, as well as their surroundings, to find their identity and who and what they are expected to be.
So What is Teen Anxiety in "Layman's" Terms?
Anxiety can manifest itself in different ways. It depends on the person and what they are going through in their lives. A basic definition would be to say that anxiety is a painful or apprehensive uneasiness of mind. But prolonged anxiety is a completely different ballpark. It is an overwhelming feeling of dissatisfaction and restlessness, where nothing ever seems to be right.
Symptoms of Teen Anxiety
Anxiety in teenagers can cause complications such as overeating, smoking, even depression and drug use. Medical experts have diagnosed countless numbers of teenagers with anxiety-related disorders, including, but not limited to, depression, bipolar/manic depression, schizophrenia , and addiction. So, how, then, do you know when anxiety becomes a problem for your child?
Some signs of severe teen anxiety are as follows:
  • Anger
  • Depression
  • Fatigue
  • Extreme mood swings
  • Substance abuse
  • Secretive behavior
  • Changes in sleeping and eating habits
  • Bad hygiene or meticulous attention to
  • Compulsive or obsessive behavior
Teenagers face circumstances that may or may not be to their liking every day. But the ability to handle these situations, for a teen that suffers from anxiety, can seem overwhelming and even impossible. The resilience most teens have is not as present in a teen that has an anxiety disorder. What one teen looks at as a means to an end, the other teen sees only as the end.
What Can You Do to Prevent Anxiety in Your Teen?
The key to success in all relationships seems to be the same. Listen. Teenagers don't want to talk about their problems to a parent who lectures them and criticizes every move. Teens need someone who they can vent their frustrations to and release that inner tension which is ever-present in any teenager, but much more so in an anxiety sufferer. Teenagers need to know that whatever they say will be accepted. They need to know that they can trust you, and that they are loved and cared for. Find activities to help get rid of the restlessness, and don't discourage a teenager from becoming independent and finding his or her own outlets. You also need to pay close attention to the warning signs, and if your teen is suffering, call your family doctor or local mental health professional for help, because no one can do it alone.
I Think My Teen Has A Problem With Anxiety
Oftentimes, the battle seems endless. But it is possible for a teen to combat anxiety. There are a variety of methods, such as:
  • Therapy
  • A healthy parental relationship
  • Hotlines
  • Medication
  • Understanding, but above all?
  • Support
Doctors seem to be prescribing anti-anxiety medications to teenager more than ever. 80% of teens today are on some kind of anti-anxiety meds. Sometimes medication is necessary, but only in the most severe cases. It is always better to approach anxiety without using any drugs if possible, because medication does change one's brain chemistry, especially in teens, where the drugs are stronger, and the teen is more susceptible.

Monday, October 29, 2012

Teens responsible for much prescription drug abuse


According to a new study, the teen in your household might be a prescription drug abuser. Researchers affiliated with the University of Colorado Denver published these unfortunate findings online on October 16 in the Journal of Adolescent medicine.
A research team headed by Richard Miech, PhD, MPH note that, in the United States, the nonmedical use of prescription analgesics (pain killers) has increased substantially in recent years. They noted, that prior to their study, it was unknown whether today’s teens are disproportionately driving this increase or, instead, the trend is a general one that has simultaneously affected individuals of all ages. Therefore, they conducted a study evaluating the nonmedical use of analgesics among different age groups.
The authors note that the total number of hydrocodone and oxycodone products prescribed legally in the US increased more than fourfold from about 40 million in 1991 to nearly 180 million in 2007. They explained that this situation makes first-time nonmedical use of analgesics among contemporary teens easier than in the past because more homes have prescription analgesics in their medicine cabinets; furthermore, the majority of individuals who use analgesics non-medically get them from friends and relatives. The researchers assessed data from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health, which is a series of annual, nationally representative, cross-sectional surveys of the US civilian, non-institutionalized population. They focused their analysis on the years 1985 through 2009; they employed a recently-developed “intrinsic estimator” algorithm to separate the data into different age groups.
The researchers found that substantial increases in the prevalence of nonmedical analgesic use have occurred across individuals of all ages in recent years; however, this increase is significantly augmented among today’s adolescents. The odds of past-year nonmedical analgesic use for today’s youngest cohort (born 1980–1994) are higher than would be expected on the basis of their age; furthermore, broad, historical period influences that have increased use across individuals of all ages. They noted that analgesic use is approximately 40% higher for today’s teen population than any of the teen populations that came before them. This finding was present among males, females, non-Hispanic whites, non-Hispanic blacks, and Hispanics.
Across all time periods, the researchers found that males had a higher nonmedical analgesic use than females; furthermore, non-Hispanic whites have higher prevalence than non-Hispanic blacks and Hispanics. For both males and females, respondents between the ages of 15 and 24 years had the highest prevalence of nonmedical analgesic use.
The authors concluded that the nonmedical use of analgesics occurs among all age groups; however, today’s teens warrant special attention for substance abuse policies and interventions targeted at reversing the increase in nonmedical use of prescription analgesics.
Take home message:
Teen drug abuse is also significant in other nations. For example, a study published last April in the journal Canadian Family Physician, reported that “nonmedical use of opioids is common among Ontario students.” This is a serious healthcare issue. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), prescription drugs have replaced heroin and cocaine as the leading drugs involved in fatal drug overdoses in all urban-rural categories. The agency notes that fatal drug overdoses are no longer a predominantly urban phenomenon. National prevention efforts will have to shift to address nontraditional populations using nontraditional drugs



Sunday, October 28, 2012

Preventing Eating Disorders and Obesity Among Teens


According to Dr. Dianne Neumark-Sztainer, an epidemiologist at the University of Minnesota, most preventive therapies focus on either 1) preventing eating disorders by addressing risk factors such as dieting and body dissatisfaction, or 2) preventing obesity by addressing risk factors such as overeating and low levels of physical activity. However, Dr. Neumark-Sztainer proposes integrating these two approaches. She advocates greater collaboration among professionals in the eating disorders and obesity treatment fields. Integration can save time and expense, increase the effectiveness of both approaches, and eliminate conflicting messages. Here are some of her recommendations for prevention activists.
Ways to Work Toward the Prevention of Weight-Related Disorders
  1. Talk with professionals who work in different fields and have different perspectives related to obesity and eating disorders.
  2. Listen to others and expand your perspective on how best to work toward the prevention of weight-related disorders.
  3. Read relevant literature to learn more about the fields of eating disorders and obesity.
  4. Work to open up lines of communication across disciplines and perspectives and to foster collaborative relationships.
  5. Help to develop messages and interventions for both groups and individuals that will assist kids in dealing with weight-related disorders.
  6. Constantly assess interventions to make sure they are effective and have not inadvertently led to an increase in undesirable behaviors. For example, in programs that target obesity, also consider their effects on body image and dieting behaviors. Make sure that programs addressing eating disorders are not unintentionally teaching kids new techniques of self-abuse.
  7. Make sure that treatment and prevention programs consider the broad spectrum of weight-related behaviors and conditions.
  8. Work with parents of teens to help families establish healthy eating patterns, increase physical activity, and avoid excessive preoccupation with weight.
  9. Influence news and advertising media and school policies to decrease exposure to junk food ads, promote increased opportunities for physical activity, and increase healthy food choices where kids eat.
Paradigm Malibu is devoted to the provision of state of the art Teen Drug Treatment, Adolescent Behavioral Health, Mental Health and Emotional Health Treatment. To learn more about our services, please visit our web site at: www.paradigmmalibu.com

Saturday, October 27, 2012

Teen's memorial fund to support mental health




The mother of bullied teen Amanda Todd wants the fundraising efforts she has started in her daughter’s name to help shed light on mental illness and prevent more young people from taking their own lives.
Carol Todd, a teacher with the Coquitlam school district, says she hopes her  daughter’s story can be used to accomplish something positive.
“This is my baby girl, and for some reason, people around the world have connected with her story,” said Todd. “My hope is that we can harness that interest, and some good can come out of this. Maybe we can save someone else’s kid.”
The Youtube video Amanda posted a month prior to her death detailing the harassment she suffered from an online predator and school bullies, how she descended into drug and alcohol abuse, as well as self harm, has been viewed close to 20 million times.
But Amanda was far from alone, says her mother.
Suicide numbers among females aged 10 to 19 have risen from 50 cases in 1980 to 77 in 2008, according to a report published by the Public Health Agency of Canada earlier this year.
“Personally, I would pay out of my own pocket for someone to look at reasons why young girls are committing suicide,” says Todd. “Until you work out the why, you can’t work out the how.”
To that end, Todd has established a trust fund to support youth mental health, as well as cyber-bullying education and a scholarship fund for students with learning disabilities.
Todd says she was inspired to start the memorial fund in the days after her daughter’s death, when she began to receive countless bouquets of flowers, and realized the money could be better spent elsewhere.
“I wanted all the money people were spending to go to a purposeful thing,” she says. “Then it took on a life of its own.”
Todd says one of the reasons she is sharing her daughter’s story is help shed a light on the problem of mental illness, and how it effects young people.
“Mental illness is invisible,” she says. “And if someone is suffering from mental illness, they’re just ‘crazy’ or ‘psycho.’”
The especially sensitive nature of someone suffering severe depression makes these barbs sting all the worse.
“You can hear all the positive comments in the world, but all it takes is one negative comment to put you right back down,” Todd says.
However, while Todd works to raise funds to prevent future tragedies, Internet scam artists are working to raise funds to line their own pockets.
In recent weeks, a number of fake fundraising campaigns with no connection to the Todd family have sprung up, soliciting donations in Amanda’s name.
“Some people are getting sucked into donating somewhere else, but that money is not going to the kids,” says Todd. “There are some really sick people out there.”
Donations to Amanda’s Memorial Fund, which will help fund mental health and anti-bullying initiates, and to Amanda’s Legacy Fund, which will support students with learning disabilities, can only be made through RBC bank branches, or through the Vancouver Foundation, which is administering the funds in order to allow international donations through the foundation’s website.
Todd says more than $12,000 in donations have already been collected through RBC bank, with more coming into the Vancouver Foundation.
“I don’t know how much they have collected so far, but I understand there have been some big benefactors asking about [the fund],” Todd says.
Currently, Vancouver Foundation manages more than 1,400 endowment funds with a total market value of almost $735 million.

Paradigm Malibu is devoted to the provision of state of the art Teen Drug Treatment, Adolescent Behavioral Health, Mental Health and Emotional Health Treatment. To learn more about our services, please visit our web site at: www.paradigmmalibu.com



Heroin use among teenagers is increasing at an alarming rate as experts say the drug, long considered to be prevalent only in urban areas, is infiltrating the suburbs.
All across suburban America, young people are getting hooked on a drug parents never suspected they needed to fear.
“Kids in the city know not to touch it, but the message never got out to the suburbs,” former Chicago Police Capt. John Roberts told NBC News.
Roberts’ 19-year-old son died of a heroin overdose after the family moved to Chicago’s suburbs. Roberts, newly retired from the police department, thought his children would be safer.

“We didn’t think it would ever be a problem out here,” he said.
National data from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration shows that the number of teens dying from heroin abuse has skyrocketed. In 1999, 198 people between the ages of 15 and 24 died of a heroin overdose, compared to 510 deaths in 2009, the latest year data was taken.
More teens are seeking treatment for heroin abuse, too — the figure jumped from 4,414 to more than 21,000 (about 80 percent) between 1999 and 2009. Ninety percent of teen heroin addicts are white, according to the data.
According to NBC News, prescription painkillers are the link between suburban teens and heroin. Teens addicted to pills like Oxycodone can find the same high in heroin, which is cheaper, more intense and easier to buy.
Roberts says his son, Billy, first became addicted to prescription painkillers, but when he and his friends could no longer afford their habit, they turned to heroin, which they could buy for 1/10 of the price.
“It’s hard to talk about the heroin problem without talking about the prescription drug problem,” Rafael Lemaitre, of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy told NBC News.
Death from prescription drugs tripled between 2000 and 2008, according to national data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
NBC News reports that out of dozens of interviews with former heroin addicts, nearly all reported getting hooked the same way. They started with prescription drugs they purchased from friends, and when they became too addicted to afford the number of pills they needed to get high, they switched to cheaper heroin.
A March 2010 report by ABC News highlights efforts by drug traffickers in Mexico and Columbia to market heroin to suburban teens, by splashing popular logos, like Prada or Chevrolet, on the small drug packets.
Some dealers even give it away for free in the suburbs, then sell to the kids once they become hooked.
Mexico has seen a huge increase in heroin production to meet the demand — from 7 metric tons in 2002 to 50 metric tons in 2012, according to the National Drug Intelligence Center.
The supply ensures the drug makes it across the United States.
“Twenty years ago, half of the heroin addicts in treatment lived in two states — New York and California,” Dr. Joe Gay, director of Health Recovery Services in Ohio, told MSNBC. “[Now, in Ohio] we’re seeing it spread out of the cities, into the suburbs and into the rural areas.”



Heroin use among teenagers is increasing at an alarming rate as experts say the drug, long considered to be prevalent only in urban areas, is infiltrating the suburbs.“We didn’t think it would ever be a problem out here,” he said.
National data from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration shows that the number of teens dying from heroin abuse has skyrocketed. In 1999, 198 people between the ages of 15 and 24 died of a heroin overdose, compared to 510 deaths in 2009, the latest year data was taken.
More teens are seeking treatment for heroin abuse, too — the figure jumped from 4,414 to more than 21,000 (about 80 percent) between 1999 and 2009. Ninety percent of teen heroin addicts are white, according to the data.
According to NBC News, prescription painkillers are the link between suburban teens and heroin. Teens addicted to pills like Oxycodone can find the same high in heroin, which is cheaper, more intense and easier to buy.
Roberts says his son, Billy, first became addicted to prescription painkillers, but when he and his friends could no longer afford their habit, they turned to heroin, which they could buy for 1/10 of the price.
“It’s hard to talk about the heroin problem without talking about the prescription drug problem,” Rafael Lemaitre, of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy told NBC News.
Death from prescription drugs tripled between 2000 and 2008, according to national data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
NBC News reports that out of dozens of interviews with former heroin addicts, nearly all reported getting hooked the same way. They started with prescription drugs they purchased from friends, and when they became too addicted to afford the number of pills they needed to get high, they switched to cheaper heroin.
A March 2010 report by ABC News highlights efforts by drug traffickers in Mexico and Columbia to market heroin to suburban teens, by splashing popular logos, like Prada or Chevrolet, on the small drug packets.
Some dealers even give it away for free in the suburbs, then sell to the kids once they become hooked.
Mexico has seen a huge increase in heroin production to meet the demand — from 7 metric tons in 2002 to 50 metric tons in 2012, according to the National Drug Intelligence Center.
The supply ensures the drug makes it across the United States.
“Twenty years ago, half of the heroin addicts in treatment lived in two states — New York and California,” Dr. Joe Gay, director of Health Recovery Services in Ohio, told MSNBC. “[Now, in Ohio] we’re seeing it spread out of the cities, into the suburbs and into the rural areas.”

All across suburban America, young people are getting hooked on a drug parents never suspected they needed to fear.
“Kids in the city know not to touch it, but the message never got out to the suburbs,” former Chicago Police Capt. John Roberts told NBC News.
Roberts’ 19-year-old son died of a heroin overdose after the family moved to Chicago’s suburbs. Roberts, newly retired from the police department, thought his children would be safer.
“We didn’t think it would ever be a problem out here,” he said.
RELATED: PAINKILLER ADDICTS SWITCHING TO EASIER-TO-GET HEROIN
National data from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration shows that the number of teens dying from heroin abuse has skyrocketed. In 1999, 198 people between the ages of 15 and 24 died of a heroin overdose, compared to 510 deaths in 2009, the latest year data was taken.
More teens are seeking treatment for heroin abuse, too — the figure jumped from 4,414 to more than 21,000 (about 80 percent) between 1999 and 2009. Ninety percent of teen heroin addicts are white, according to the data.
According to NBC News, prescription painkillers are the link between suburban teens and heroin. Teens addicted to pills like Oxycodone can find the same high in heroin, which is cheaper, more intense and easier to buy.
Roberts says his son, Billy, first became addicted to prescription painkillers, but when he and his friends could no longer afford their habit, they turned to heroin, which they could buy for 1/10 of the price.
“It’s hard to talk about the heroin problem without talking about the prescription drug problem,” Rafael Lemaitre, of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy told NBC News.
Death from prescription drugs tripled between 2000 and 2008, according to national data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
NBC News reports that out of dozens of interviews with former heroin addicts, nearly all reported getting hooked the same way. They started with prescription drugs they purchased from friends, and when they became too addicted to afford the number of pills they needed to get high, they switched to cheaper heroin.
A March 2010 report by ABC News highlights efforts by drug traffickers in Mexico and Columbia to market heroin to suburban teens, by splashing popular logos, like Prada or Chevrolet, on the small drug packets.
Some dealers even give it away for free in the suburbs, then sell to the kids once they become hooked.
Mexico has seen a huge increase in heroin production to meet the demand — from 7 metric tons in 2002 to 50 metric tons in 2012, according to the National Drug Intelligence Center.
The supply ensures the drug makes it across the United States.
“Twenty years ago, half of the heroin addicts in treatment lived in two states — New York and California,” Dr. Joe Gay, director of Health Recovery Services in Ohio, told MSNBC. “[Now, in Ohio] we’re seeing it spread out of the cities, into the suburbs and into the rural areas.”