Developmentally, 18 to 22 year olds haven’t matured enough to be able to make long-term decisions. For example, they may overlook the long-term benefits of studying for the short-term satisfaction of partying with friends. Despite their poor decision-making skills, however, students are very aware of the pressures being placed on them by parents, professors and mentors. These factors create a perfect storm, bringing together developmental insecurities with the stress and pressure of academics and parental expectations. Enter one of the most common solutions to this dilemma: prescription drugs, sometimes referred to as “smart pills” or “study buddies.”
Nearly one in four high school seniors admit to abusing prescription drugs, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), and the college environment only further facilitates this kind of misuse. Young adults enrolled in college full-time are twice as likely to use stimulants for non-medical reasons than their peers, who are in college part-time or not at all, according to the National Council on Patient Information and Education (NCPIE).
Drug use on college campuses is hardly new. However, the use of prescription medications—most notably Adderall, a stimulant used to tread attention deficit disorder, and now medical marijuana—is capturing the attention of concerned health professionals and addiction specialists. Adderall and other stimulants like Ritalin top the list of prescription medications that are being sold, traded or otherwise illegally obtained on college campuses. The pressures to stay up and party with friends and achieve academically entice students to try these substances. According to NIDA, one in five students admits to using Adderall without an ADHD diagnosis.
Other commonly abused prescription medications include sedatives like Valium or Xanax and opioid analgesics like Vicodin or Percocet, reports the NCPIE. Students claim they use prescription drugs to improve grades, gain focus, reduce stress, ease nervousness and forget their problems.
What abusers fail to take into account are the risks, which include increases in blood pressure or heart rate, organ damage, addiction, difficulty breathing, seizure, heart attack, stroke and even death. Even more unsettling is that access to prescription medications becomes surprisingly easy when kids enter adulthood and doctors are free to prescribe without any parent consultation.
It is difficult to monitor a child who is away at school, but not impossible. Consistent and frequent communication is vital in preventing or discovering drug abuse. Remember, the best predictor of the future is the past. Parents who unwittingly overlook experimentation in high school may pave the way for a student’s willingness to say yes more easily when they get to college. Talking with your child early and often can make a difference. Visit them on campus, or FaceTime to help monitor how they are doing while away.
By // Dr. Lisa Strohman
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