Indiana Teen Drug Stats Show Need For Early Intervention

The National Center for Drug Abuse Statistics reported almost 3% of Hoosier teens age 12 to 17 abuse pain relievers. Photo by Adobe Stock.
By Terri Dee
Indiana News Service
INDIANAPOLIS — Hoosier teens are nearly 3% more likely to have used cocaine, methamphetamines or heroin than other teens nationwide, according to the National Center for Drug Abuse Statistics and the types of drugs they choose are producing deadly side effects.
Indianapolis-based nonprofit Overdose Lifeline partners with other states to offer substance use prevention education programs.
Justin Phillips, founder and CEO of Overdose Lifeline, said young people are sharing prescription drugs like Adderall and Xanax with their peers and dying from suicide and overdoses at alarming rates. She stressed the numbers are preventable.
“Onset can be as early as 12, and it varies according to the substance that they’re using,” Phillips reported. “We have a lot of challenges around vaping right now, which is a nicotine and/or a cannabis vape.”
Philips advocates for early intervention when abuse is identified to help prevent it from becoming chronic. She added research has shown when a substance is introduced to the brain before age 15, it is five times more likely to alter the brain structure and create an addiction.
Last year, more than 700 Hoosiers of all ages died of drug-related overdoses. Although rare, Phillips pointed out cases are appearing in Indiana of people mixing the animal tranquilizer Xylazine with fentanyl or other drugs. She noted it is especially dangerous, because Xylazine does not respond to the overdose drug naloxone and can cause other damaging side effects.
“Xylazine isn’t really something someone wants to use, so people are really spending more time trying to avoid Xylazine through testing,” Phillips explained. “It’s the fentanyl that we have the biggest concern around with young people, because there’s fentanyl in almost everything you purchase illicitly.”
She added people are able to purchase unregulated drugs on social media and the dark web. Overdose Lifeline offers a chatbot known as “KATE,” which stands for Knowledge, Advocacy, Trust and Education, which answers self-care questions if a loved one is using, what to do if someone overdoses and how to talk to someone who is using drugs.