Rave Radio: Offline (0/0)
Email: Password:
News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Old High Lures New Generation
Title:US CA: Old High Lures New Generation
Published On:1999-05-24
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA)
Fetched On:2008-09-06 05:38:05
OLD HIGH LURES NEW GENERATION

Thrill of Inhaling Outweighs Dangers for Many Teens, Experts Warn

School officials and drugtreatment counselors fear that an old drug habit
among teens is gaining increased acceptance: sniffing household products
such as air freshener, whippedcream canisters and furniture polish. Teens
get a quick, inexpensive high from the sniffing - also known as "huffing" -
because the chemicals go straight to the brain and can prevent oxygen from
entering the bloodstream. But health experts warn that the practice can
seriously damage organs and can cause blackouts and even death. "It's an
almost accepted teenage phenomenon because it does happen a lot at some of
their parties," said William Smith, founder of first Phoenix House drug
treatment center in Orange County. "It's almost like saying 'We're not
supposed to use drugs or alcohol, but no one is going to say too much about
these other things." Smith said that when he opened his clinic in 1979,
only two or three out of 50 teens in the program inhaled household
products. Now, he estimates that more than half of the roughly 30 students
in the counseling program inhaled. Others said the inhaling is especially
popular among curious junior high school students.

At Ensign Intermediate School in Newport Beach, for example, officials
suspect several students recently sprayed aerosol computer cleaner into one
another's mouths. "My fear is that they are using these drugs because they
are around and available and don't consider them drugs," said Lynne
Bloomberg, who coordinates safety and drugfree programs at NewportMesa
Unified School District. Bloomberg suspects that some teens who inhale do
so for quick thrills and are not necessarily heavy drug users. "I really
think they know it's dangerous, but risk is so fun," she said. "It's
exciting and they are curious and want to know how it feels." Sniffing
household products has been a problem for decades.

In the 1970s and 1980s, teens mainly inhaled fumes from spray paints,
correction fluid and model airplane glue. Officials now report a new crop
of popular inhalants, such as aerosol computer cleaner sprays and tanks of
nitrous oxide. Some of those who inhale are also using other drugs,
according to several teens receiving treatment at Phoenix House. The teens
and their parents agreed to tell their stories publicly in an effort to
help others. A 16-year-old Costa Mesa student said she used to inhale
fumes from furniture polish and whipped cream canisters while using such
drugs as cocaine, LSD and marijuana. The teen said she would inhale during
raves and parties to increase her high from other drugs.

Most of the products, she said, were at home or easily bought at
supermarkets. Locking up every product in the home is not the solution,
said Brent Ekins of the California Poison Control System. Rather, parents
need to be aware of the practice of sniffing and watch for unusual
behavior, Ekins said. Signs include chemical odor on the breath, spots or
sores around the mouth, irritability and changes in school grades, sleeping
or eating habits.
Member Comments
No member comments available...