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Hispanic Teens Abusing Prescription Drugs
By ANABELLE GARAY, Associated Press Writer
Wednesday, July 26, 2006
DALLAS (AP) -- Hispanic teenagers are using prescription
medicine to get high more than other teens in the country,
federal drug prevention officials said Wednesday as they
announced a national campaign aimed at curbing the problem.
While use of illegal drugs among Hispanics is typically
lower than other groups, one in five Hispanic teenagers
reported trying prescription drugs to get high, according
to a 2005 survey by Partnership for a Drug-Free America.
"We are concerned the Hispanic youth, especially, are
leading this race, and it's a race we don't want them
to win," said Mary Ann Solberg, deputy director of the
White House Office of National Drug Control Policy.
Hispanic practices can both complicate and help solve
the problem, experts say.
Families that normally obtain medications without prescriptions
at Latin American pharmacies will sometimes stock up there,
then return to the U.S. with the drugs.
That makes the medications available to teenagers, who
also can get them online without a prescription, said
Carlos Ugarte, senior public health adviser for the National
Council of La Raza, a Hispanic advocacy group.
Yet parents have more power in swaying their children
than they may realize, according to experts.
Hispanic parents usually emphasize family ties and respect
for elders, and data show the main reason most Latino
teenagers abstain from drug use is the dread of offending
their parents, Ugarte said.
"You as a parent ... you have the ability to discuss drug
use with your children and to communicate very clearly
for them that you expect that they not use drugs. That
in our family this is not what we do. That we have exceptions
of you," Solberg said.
Still, parents often aren't aware of the risks posed by
medications or don't talk about them, experts said. Only
one-third of parents reported discussing the risks of
prescription and over-the-counter medicines in the partnership's
study.
"Sometimes as Latino parents we're reluctant to touch
on taboo issues," Ugarte said.
Many teenagers don't realize the problems that arise from
misusing prescription and over-the counter-drugs, experts
say.
An estimated 45 percent of Hispanic teenagers believe
that prescription medicines are safer than illegal drugs,
the partnership survey found.
The White House Office of National Drug Control Policy
launched a national advertising campaign Wednesday to
inform parents and help them prevent drug abuse among
their children.
As part of the campaign, an open letter-style advertisement
signed by nearly a dozen Latino organizations will run
in the top 14 Hispanic media markets.
Materials include a brochure on preventing drug use and
a two-disc DVD for parents on how to discuss difficult
issues.
The materials are available in Spanish and English.
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