The rich white YHS, WL parents send their teens to the in-house treatment center in Ballston to overcome their drug addictions. It's all repressed and hush-hush.
Somebody has their head in the sand if they can't see this stuff is all over the public schools w/teens right now. |
It is completely ignorant, but as a HS ELL teacher in FCPS, the fentanyl issue is hitting the Hispanic community especially hard. It’s true at my own school as well at other schools in the area (ex. The student from Wakefield). |
Well it doesn't mirror National data and it certainly won't be confined to that population at the rate it's growing. Nationwide: Seventy-nine percent of individuals who overdose on opioids are non-Hispanic White, 10% are Black and non-Hispanic, and 8% are Hispanic |
The article in the original post mentioned groups of students skipping school and drinking alcohol. Also confined to a certain group? I'm curious how every bleeding heart in APS just writes it off as: well its the Hispanics. The same people that wax poetically at how proud they are to send their kids to schools with such diversity. |
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+1 It is also insanely difficult to get good treatment for opioid addiction even if you have money. I have a good friend with kids in an affluent NoVA school who has been struggling with this with one of her kids for YEARS. Just finding a good facility for treatment of teens is extremely difficult. There are not enough and most of them that do exist do not provide long enough residential treatment. This is not an easy, just-say-no, more-discipline fix. It is heartbreaking. And that for someone who has the money to be able to pay for what treatment they can find. For a family without resources, there is nothing effective. |
What can the county do about it? Where are the parents monitoring their kids who skipped school? |
APS now sends out texts if your kid is missing class. Parents should know in pretty close to real time it's happening. |
Studies link opioid overdoses to lower income people. So far it's been a lot of lower income white people (who no one in Arlington cared about but been going on for a long time). Arlington doesn't have that many lower income white people. |
I talked to ACPD recently. We often have drunks/crime because we live close to the bars- so they are out often. They are seeing epidemic levels of opioid/fentanyl in the County. And, no, it's not confined to lower income here in AC is what was relayed to me. |
Fentanyl-involved deaths are fastest growing among 14-23 year olds and they can be in the form of rainbow colored pills that look like candy. It's getting into the other demographic populations. And, HHI kids are getting what they think is prescription ADHD drugs and other stimulants (buying off their phone) and they end up being fatal doses of a counterfit laced with fetanyl. They are getting this sometimes from friends. |
That would be fine EXCEPT the investigation to the fatal overdose in school found that administration and staff often knew some students were high on something during the day, but did not report the behavior or any suspicion to parents. Kids were using in school. It was well known, just like the kids vaping. |
Time to bring scared straight back into schools. |
These studies are about the opioid epidemic of the last decades - prescription drug overdose. Can begin with a legitimate medical problem; back pain, accident, recovery after surgery… combined with other problems… then gettting prescriptions from several different sources, lying about losing prescriptions etc. etc. What we are dealing with in the schools is different; Fentanyl laced fake pills. None of these are from prescribed sources, all are entirely illegal and serve no medical purpose. |
Thank you for clarifying. Posters obviously have the opioid crisis mixed up with fetanyl drug crisis. |