| Wednesday, June 21st, 2006 | Emily Halevy | CWK Producer |
“It’s readily available at home, so kids as early as fourth graders are starting to experiment with inhalants - and that’s very, very alarming.”
– Marietta Collins, PhD, clinical psychologist
The number of kids getting high off common household products, such as keyboard cleaner and liquid paper, has been slowly rising for years. But studies show it’s reached a new high. According to the ‘Partnership for a Drug-Free America’, one in five teenagers now say they have used inhalants.
Experts say most kids still aren’t getting the message- inhalants are dangerous and deadly.
17-year-old Christie say she’s tried it all: “Everything from like spray-paint, glue, everything.”
“You can buy cream chargers, that’s what they call it,” says 20-year-old Heather Hutchins, “the nitrous oxide, those are a lot of fun.”
Experts say the number of teens using inhalants is going up. What’s going down is the message that “huffing” is deadly.
“Inhalant perceived risk numbers are going down,” explains clinical psychologist Marietta Collins, “They don’t think it’s as dangerous as it was in the past, because they’re not getting the message that inhalants can kill.”
“I don’t think there’s anything wrong with inhaling, anything unless your body starts to deteriorate, you know,” says 19-year-old Brandi M.
“Kids just feel that they’re invulnerable - that this won’t happen to me, that I can try this one time and see what it’s like,” warns Collins. “And sometimes, unfortunately with drugs, one time is too many.”
That was the case for 17-year-old Ashley Carter. She died after inhaling computer cleaner.
“She’d gone into cardiac arrest and passed out and never woke-up,” says her best-friend Jessica.
Experts say parents need to make it clear- inhalants can kill.
“Inhalant use, any drug use, is not tolerated, is not good, is harmful for you,” instructs Collins on what to say to your kids. “Parents should start giving these messages as early as elementary school - because again, these are the products that are in the home.”
She says that while it’s difficult to recognize, some of the signs of inhalant abuse include “a chemical odor…from your child’s breath, on your child’s clothing, paint stains…on clothing, hands, [and] on your child’s face.”
But most importantly, if you spot signs of inhalant abuse, put a stop to it- immediately.
“People need to realize that it doesn’t take doing something a hundred times for it to mess you up,” says Jessica, “like, it could be the first time you ever do it.”