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Author DXM News (laughingly inaccurate): "Cold relief an easy-access high"
rfgdxm/Robert F. Golaszewski

2004-08-25, 12:30 pm

DXM is a base ingredient for making meth??? And "Triple C" contains no
pseudoephedrine, nor is it anything like methamphetamine. Dr. Don Beard is a
*quack*. I must have forgot more about DXM and its psychopharmacology that
he'll ever know.


http://www.coloradoan.com/news/stor...ws/1100954.html

Cold relief an easy-access high
Teens find 'crude meth' in medicines available on store shelves

By COURTNEY LINGLE
CourtneyLingle@coloradoan.com

Cold medications can seem like heaven when you are coughing uncontrollably
and drowning in mucous.
But as all too many Fort Collins teens are finding out, that's not the only
time those over-the-counter drugs can bring on a euphoric effect.

Local youth advocates say an alarming number of Larimer County youths are
abusing cough syrup and cold medications such as Coricidin HBP Cough & Cold,
commonly known as "Triple C."

Taking as much as 10 times the recommended dose, kids across the United
States are "robo- tripping" their way to hallucinations and euphoria not
unlike the effects produced by methamphetamine.

"It's just crude meth," said Dr. Don Beard, a semi-retired pediatrician and
a consultant with The Center, a Fort Collins-based youth treatment
organization. The pseudoephedrine found in Sudafed and other cold tablets
and the dextromethorphan, or DXM, found in many cough suppressants are base
ingredients for making meth.

Affecting the basal ganglia, or pleasure center of the brain, the drugs
produce euphoric effects but also can result in increased body temperature,
irregular heartbeat, high blood pressure, seizures, loss of consciousness,
brain and liver damage, respiratory distress and even death.

Laurie Klith, executive director of The Center, said some local teens are
abusing pseudoephedrine and DXM. From October 2003 through this month, 39
youths at The Center have admitted to taking Triple C and drinking
Robitussin cough syrup, Klith said.

Tyson Hart, a 17-year-old from Loveland, is one of them.

"The first time I tried it was about a year ago," said Hart, who became
clean in May after he was arrested for stealing over-the-counter medicines
from Safeway. "I tried it once, and it just made me feel like I was drunk.
After that, I got hooked."

Danielle Garfield, a case manager with The Center, said her clients describe
a sense of unbelievable euphoria, often coupled with hallucinations.
According to the Partnership for a Drug-Free America, DXM abuse causes
distorted perceptions of sight and sound, as well as feelings of detachment
or separation from the environment and self.

"It was just crazy," Hart said. "It was like you weren't even there."

Pseudoephedrine is a stimulant. Taken in normal doses, DXM is a cough
suppressant, but it has a stimulating effect when taken in large doses.

While some kids use the drugs to self-medicate for attention deficit
disorder and mental-health problems, advocates say the majority are simply
experimenting.

Like most teens who abuse Triple C and other decongestants, Hart began
stealing drugs from local pharmacies to feed his habit.

"We'd grab all the boxes they had there," he said. "We'd go to Wal-Mart,
Walgreen's, Safeway, Kmart."

Because they are legal, nonprescription drugs, the cold medications often
are kept on store shelves, where they are easily accessible to teens.

Catching on to the trend, however, many local pharmacies are taking steps to
prevent abuse.

Jeanette Yochum, a pharmacist at Walgreen's, 2190 W. Drake Road, said some
Walgreen's stores limit access to cold medicines, keeping them behind the
counter and not allowing customers to purchase more than one or two boxes.

"It is a problem," she said, noting that theft has become more common.

Les Moll, pharmacy manager at Longs Drugs, 1538 E. Harmony Road, said his
staff keeps packages with large quantities behind the counter. But Moll said
he hasn't seen a big problem with teens stealing cold medications.

For two and half months, Hart said he was averaging 16 pills a day. That's
when his attitude changed, and he began fighting with his mother.

On New Year's Eve, Hart came home high, falling down and acting like he was
drunk, said his mom, Kris Johnson, 42, of Loveland. Two weeks later, after
coming home high again, Hart told his mom about his drug problem.

"In hindsight, he was talking about Triple C and robo-tripping," Johnson
said, urging parents to listen to their kids with an educated and discerning
ear. "I didn't know what that was."

While dilated pupils, stumbling, drunk-like actions and loss of judgment are
some of the signs, Johnson said Hart abused drugs for months without her
realizing it.

"He was always going to school, doing what he had to do," she said. "I
wasn't seeing a big difference in his behavior."

But at the height of his addiction, Hart became volatile and angry, and he
started running away.

At one point, Johnson discovered 12 empty bottles of Robitussin cough syrup
while unpacking Hart's bags. Weeks later, she got a call from police saying
he'd been picked up trying to steal pills at Safeway.

Not long after, Hart was enrolled in treatment at Pathways to Recovery and
has since thrived in classes at The Center.

"He has totally turned things around now," Johnson said, considering her
family lucky that Hart got a second chance. Not all users are so fortunate.

"These kids are blowing out of school. They're defiant, running away,
involved in criminal activity," Klith said. "To think that some of these
kids have driver's licenses and they're driving."

Local advocates are urging parents to be aware of the over-the-counter
trend, to learn the signs and to get a little nosy to protect their kids.
That means recognizing that just because a drug is legal doesn't mean
everything is OK.

"We just need to have parents raise their level of awareness," Klith said.
"Ask the questions -- 'Who are you with? What are you doing?' -- and be
aware of what's in your kids' rooms."

Garfield said she wishes stores would become more aware and put the drugs
behind the counter.

Johnson said she thinks good communication and making sure kids know they
can talk to their parents without them getting mad is key.

"I think (Tyson) was trying to tell me he had a problem," she said. "If you
find a box of cold medications in your kid's backpack, it's not because they
have a cold."

Originally published Monday, August 23, 2004


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