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Reply to "Just how prevalent is this oxy addiction thing among our young adults in top privates?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]A takeaway here is parents must take teen pain very seriously. Opiates after a severe bone break are not inappropriate. But the parent has to control very carefully and take proactive measures to manage any lingering pain. This needs to be discussed with the doctor--no harm on impressing on them the dangers of teen pain because most simply don't get that if they won't it is all too easy for the teen to find things he can self-medicate with. If your teen complains of pain without obvious cause treat this as a medical emergency. Go see a doctor. If he is dismissive or hints it's all psychological so doing anything will just feed the psychological illness, go to doctor after doctor until you find one that will take it seriously and address it urgently through non-opiate means. At a minimum, this will show your teen you are on their side and you at least are taking it seriously. This helps prevents the despair that causes teens in this situation to turn to drugs. And all of the above also applies to mental pain as well.[/quote] +++++ 10000 We do not accept opiates for a bone break, wisdom teeth, etc. We throw away all opiates in the house. We don't leave drugs around the house. [/quote] If only all parents were as wise. [/quote]
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