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Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN Drugs Impact Your Health

Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

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Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN. Drugs Impact Your Health. Objectives. Drug trends and data Impacts on your health Test your knowledge. High School and Youth Trends. In 2013, 7% of 8 th graders, 18% of 10 th graders and 23% of 12 th graders used___________ in the past month? MARIJUANA - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

Drugs Impact Your Health

Page 2: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

Objectives

● Drug trends and data

● Impacts on your health

● Test your knowledge

Page 3: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

High School and Youth Trends

● In 2013, 7% of 8th graders, 18% of 10th graders and 23% of 12th graders used___________ in the past month?

● MARIJUANA

● Growing perception of marijuana as a safe drug, but many dealers are lacing marijuana with Heroin and Cocaine.

Page 4: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

High School and Youth Trends

● 14.8% of high school seniors used a prescription drug for non medical reasons or that was not prescribed for them in the past year.

● Every day in the US an average of 2,000 teenagers use prescription drugs without a doctor's guidance.

● Prescription and over-the-counter medications account for most of the top drugs abused by 12th graders in the past year, Adderall and Vicodin being the most commonly abused.

Page 5: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

Drug Average User

Tobacco 31.9%

Heroin 23.1%

Cocaine 16.7%

Alcohol 15.4%

Cannabis 9.0%

The percentage of users who become tolerant and then addicted to their

respective drug at some point :

“Dangerousness of Drugs a Guide to the Risks and Harms Associated With Substance Misuse -- National Addiction Center. Retrieved 6 May 2014.

Page 6: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

12th Grade National Drug Trends 2011

Page 7: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

Heroin Trends in Northern KY

Page 8: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

Heroin Trends

● 33% of 200 patients were between the ages of 16 and 25

● 44% Female and 54% Male

● 96% of the patients were white

Page 9: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

Heroin

• Is a drug made from morphine, a “natural substance” in the seedpod of the Asian poppy plant

• Usually appears as a white or brown powder

• It can be injected, smoked or snorted

• Although purer heroin is becoming more common, most street heroin is "cut" with other drugs or with substances such as sugar, starch, powdered milk, or quinine. Street heroin also can be cut with fentanyl or other poisons.

Page 10: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

Heroin

Page 11: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

Heroin

Page 12: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

Roulette

Page 13: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

Impacts your health

Page 14: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

Impacts of your Liver

● Hepatitis CRates of acute infections of Hepatitis C in Northern Kentucky

doubles the state rate and are 24 times the national rate. Public health officials attribute Northern Kentucky’s high infection rate to the region’s high levels of the intravenous (IV) use of heroin.

Hepatitis C is a serious disease that can result in long-term health problems, including liver damage, liver failure, liver cancer, or even death. It is the leading cause of cirrhosis and liver cancer and the most common reason for liver transplant in the US

Page 15: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

● Hepatitis C is a contagious liver disease which is spread through contact with blood of an infected person

● Hepatitis C is spread by– Sharing needles and syringes– Getting tattoo or body piercing where infection

control standards are not met– Needle stick– Being born to a mother who has Hepatitis C

15,000 people die every year from Hepatitis C

Page 16: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

Brain

● Your brain stops developing at what age?

●25

Page 17: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

Impacts your brain

● The brain is the command center of your body. It controls everything you do, even when you are sleeping.

● When drugs enter the brain they can interrupt that work and actually change how the brain performs. These changes lead to compulsive drug use, the hallmark of addiction.

Page 18: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

Impacts your brain

● Drugs are chemicals. They work the brain by tapping into the communication system and interfering with the way nerve cells normally send, receive, and process information.

● Marijuana and heroin, activate neurons - the chemical structure of these drugs mimics that of the natural neurotransmitter.

● Drugs can fool receptors, lock onto them, and activate sending abnormal messages through the brain.

Page 19: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

Impacts the brain

● All drugs affect the brains “reward” circuit. The reward circuit responds to the pleasure experiences by releasing the neurotransmitter, dopamine, which creates the feeling of pleasure, and tells the brain that this is something important—pay attention and remember it.

● Drugs “highjack” this system causing large amounts of dopamine to flood the system causing a high or euphoric feeling.

Page 20: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

Impacts your brain

Page 21: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

Addiction

Initial decision to take drugs is a choice, a physical needreplaces that choice...

ADDICTION

compulsive need for and use of a habit-forming substance (as heroin, nicotine, or alcohol) characterized by tolerance and by well-defined physiological symptoms upon withdrawal; broadly :  persistent compulsive use of a substance known by the user to be harmful

Page 22: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN
Page 23: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

How do I know if I have a drug problem?

● Have you ever ridden in a car driven by someone (including yourself) who had been using drugs?

● Do you ever use drugs to relax, to feel better about yourself, or to fit in?

● Do you ever use drugs when you are alone?● Do you ever forget things you did while using

drugs?● Do family and friends ever tell you to cut down

on your use of drugs?

Page 24: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

Other Drugs Facts

●Spice–Variety of herbal mixtures that produce experience similar to marijuana

●Popular among young people; most used by high school seniors●Causes psychoactive (mind-altering) affects

●Bath Salts–Made up of synthetic chemicals

●Experience paranoia, agitation and hallucinations, some even display psychotic, violent behavior and death

Page 25: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

2014 National Drug IQ Challenge

In 2009, what percentage of 16 or 17 year olds drove under the influence of drugs or alcohol?

– 1.2%– 3.6%– 6.3%– 10.7%

Page 26: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

2014 National Drug IQ Challenge

Which of the following statements about the popular ADHD drug Adderall is true?

– It can make a person smarter– It can help a person focus, even if they don't have

ADHD– It causes your body to need less sleep– None of the above

Page 27: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

2014 National Drug IQ Challenge

A study that followed 1,000 people for more than 38 years showed that people who started smoking marijuana regularly as teenagers actually lost IQ points as they got older; they never got them back, even if they quit as adults. On average, how many points where lost?

– 2– 4– 8– 12

Page 28: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

2014 National Drug IQ Challenge

Some young people who abuse opioid painkillers like Oxycontin switch to Heroin.

– True– False

Page 29: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

2014 National Drug IQ Challenge

Tobacco is the leading preventable cause of disease and death in the U.S. It causes:

– About 1 in every 5 early deaths– About 1 in every 20 early deaths– About 1 in every 100 early deaths– About 1 in every 200 early deaths

Page 30: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

2014 National Drug IQ Challenge

Alcohol and marijuana are the drugs most abused by teenagers. What comes next?

– Ecstasy– Cocaine– Bath Salts– Prescription drugs and cough medicine– Tobacco

Page 31: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

2014 National Drug IQ Challenge

What is the most common two-drug combination that results in death?

– Alcohol and cocaine– Marijuana and alcohol– Prescription painkillers and alcohol– Prescription painkillers and LSD

Page 32: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

2014 National Drug IQ Challenge

About how many 8th graders have tried an inhalant to get high?

– 1 in 5– 1 in 10– 1 in 25– 1 in 200

Page 33: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

53.3% never used any illegal drug.58% never smoked marijuana.90.5% never did inhalants.90.7% never did tranquilizers.91.8% never did barbiturates.93.5% never did ecstasy.94% never did cocaine.96.1% never did LSD.97.6% never did methamphetamine.98.8% never did heroin.

When all is said and done the truth is that:

National Council on Alcohol and Drug Dependency

Page 34: Ashel Kruetzkamp, MSN, RN

Resources

NIDA (National Institute on Drug Abuse)

Drug Free NKY

St. Elizabeth Healthcare

Northern Kentucky Health Department