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04-17-2004, 01:04 PM
For decades, teenagers have found it easy to get high without buying drugs illegally: Chug cough syrup or down a fistful of cold tablets, cope with the vomiting or other possible side effects, and await the hallucinations.
But in recent months, an apparent surge in abuse of dextromethorphan (DXM), the key ingredient in some cough suppressants and cold remedies, has sparked an unprecedented response among drug manufacturers, pharmacists and awareness groups. Last year, poison control centers took 3,271 calls related to the drug -- twice the number of 2001, according to the American Association of Poison Control Centers. Cold medicine abuse was blamed for a handful of deaths in the past two years, several experts said. While no precise statistics are available, a January report from the White House's Office of National Drug Control Policy said adolescents are "increasingly abusing" DXM, singling out Portland, Ore., Detroit, Houston, Tampa-St. Petersburg, Fla., and Denver as hot spots. "It's something that's been around for a long time, but it seems to be coming back since at least 2000 among young adults," said Andrea Barthwell, the office's deputy director for demand reduction. When the Phoenix Academy recently surveyed youths in its Austin, Texas, drug rehabilitation program, it found that half the 40 teens had misused cold medicines, with an average starting age of 11.5 years. "We've seen kids abuse over-the-counter stuff before, but I do think there are more products out there now, and they're much more accessible," said Laurie DeLong, the center's program director. Drug makers and sellers say they want to change that. Since January, Walgreen Co., the nation's largest drugstore chain, has limited purchases of Coricidin HBP Cough & Cold tablets -- a DXM product known to abusers as "triple Cs" -- to three packages per customer. Manufacturers, meanwhile, have embarked on education efforts, changed packaging to discourage shoplifting and even cut back on the ingredient in some products. "We recognize there's a role for us to play," said Mary-Fran Faraji, spokeswoman for Schering-Plough Health Care Inc. of Kenilworth, N.J., which makes Coricidin. Schering-Plough is distributing fact sheets to pharmacists and parents who buy dextromethorphan products. The guide for parents urges them to talk to their children about drug abuse and to know their children's friends and their parents. Wyeth Consumer Healthcare of Madison, N.J., which makes Robitussin cough syrup, recently enlarged the packaging of its newest DXM product, anti-cough gel tabs, while reducing the amount of the drug compared to the bottled version, spokesman Fran Sullivan said. State lawmakers in New York and California want to go even further, introducing legislation that would ban sales to minors of products containing DXM. Meanwhile, pharmacies in some areas with reports of abuse are stocking Coricidin and other products containing dextromethorphan behind the counter, selling them only upon request. Dan Kennedy, manager of a Portland pharmacy, said he took action after hearing about problems with DXM in the area several months ago. "There were some high schoolers who were abusing it," he said. "At that point, we pulled Coricidin behind the counter and posted a sign saying that it's available with a pharmacist's assistance." But some pharmacists are uneasy with making the practice widespread -- they note that more than 100 different products contain the drug. "At a practical level, it raises a difficult set of issues," said Tom Holt, executive director of the Oregon State Pharmacy Association. "Take Robitussin: It's not one product -- it's a couple of dozen." Heavy dextromethorphan users describe the sensation as a series of "plateaus" that can range from a mildly stimulating effect to a sense of being completely disassociated from their bodies. "I thought I was a flower; I could feel myself swaying (in) the wind," one anonymous user posted in a message to a Web site after drinking an eight-ounce bottle of Robitussin. Steve, a 19-year-old student in Boston, said he began taking DXM at the urging of a classmate. He used it for two years -- usually Coricidin and 12-hour cough syrup, washed down with Mountain Dew soda -- before quitting. "I can remember plenty of times I thought I would die, most often from taking too much," said Steve, who spoke on the condition that his last name be withheld. "DXM is tricky. You can take a strong dose of 500 milligrams" -- around 15 tablets or six ounces of cough syrup -- "and not feel anything for two hours, decide to take more and before you know it, you're someplace you've never been before and I'll tell you what, that's scary as hell." Some avid users, however, said media accounts usually fail to mention that the serious danger lies with cold medicine ingredients other than dextromethorphan. Dr. In-Hei Hahn, a medical toxicologist at St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital in New York, agreed that the antihistamines and other ingredients in cold and cough medicines with DXM can be lethal. "If you take a large dose of DXM in a drug that contains Tylenol, the Tylenol can cause liver failure," she said. But, Hahn added, that doesn't mean DXM alone is harmless: "Everything can be a poison, depending on what the dose is." Several operators of Web sites devoted to the drug say they have taken steps to caution curious visitors. One, Erowid.org, groups submissions into categories ranging from "Bad Trips" to "Mystical Experiences." The site includes a question-and-answer section describing DXM as "a unique and uniquely powerful mind-altering drug, and one which I think most people would do best to avoid." The drug "should be limited to people who are willing to use it responsibly and in an educated manner," echoed Michael Mason, 24, of Pittsburgh, a contributor to a site called Dextroverse. Drug-abuse experts, however, worry that Web-browsing teenagers will ignore such advice in their quest for a new high -- especially since some sites contain step-by-step recipes for extracting DXM from cold and cough medicine. The Partnership for a Drug-Free America is using the Internet to launch a new educational effort about DXM. It has set up a site for parents at www.drugfree.org/dxm and another for teenagers at www.dxmstories.com. The teen site includes a photo of a youth passed out on a couch after vomiting, along with a cautionary essay by a former user illustrated with a set of skulls that begins, "You gotta be sick in the head to drink cough syrup." Partnership spokeswoman Lisa Merchant said the site has received more than 22,000 visits this year, a figure she called encouraging. Merchant compared the educational push to an initiative launched several years ago to warn about "huffing" spray paint and other household products. "The idea was to get information to parents to realize that spray paint isn't something you should just keep lying around the house," she said. "It's the same with over-the-counter drugs." <span style=\'color:green\'>(Forum PM, IRC) Dextroverse Administrator</span></span> |
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04-17-2004, 02:25 PM
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Only 22,000? Far more than that for my sites, due to superior search engine rankings. I'm actually seriously worried about the fact I had to renogiate bandwidth with the host of my sites due to the enexpected high number of hits. Sigh. http://www.coricidin.org/ |
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04-17-2004, 03:18 PM
the one thing i wanted truly out of the interview was for dxmstories.com to not be cast as an unequivocally positive thing, which it was. gg chuck.
on a whole, the article was far superior to similar stories in its factual approach, but was stylistically contrived (see first paragraph). -rudine- |
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04-17-2004, 03:52 PM
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-rudine- |
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