Anonymous wrote:Am I the only one who thinks that this is absolutely insane?
Anonymous wrote:
I keep reading about people and sometimes teens who are OD’ing thanks to fentanyl laced coke or Oxy. I equipped my kid with Narcan just in case. It’s cheap and easy and you never know who he’ll be around or what will happen. I’d rather him be prepared. Why don’t more parents/the schools do this? Of course it would be better if no one was doing drugs but that’s not the reality and ultimately I want all of our kids to live.
Anonymous wrote:Is this real?
People just carry Narcan around?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is not an EMT. I don’t think we’re at a point where we should be asking children to revive overdose victims. And if we are, well god help us.
Let's let fat people who have heart attacks die as well.
So you have a defibrillator in your purse?
Anonymous wrote:Why would individual kids carry it? The school office/ heath center, sure. But not individual kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is not an EMT. I don’t think we’re at a point where we should be asking children to revive overdose victims. And if we are, well god help us.
Let's let fat people who have heart attacks die as well.
Anonymous wrote:My kid is not an EMT. I don’t think we’re at a point where we should be asking children to revive overdose victims. And if we are, well god help us.
Anonymous wrote:My kids don't hang with druggie losers so there's no need.
Anonymous wrote:Here's why I didn't have my daughter carry it (I do): if you step into the role of saving someone's life (even temporarily), then you've mentally assumed responsibility for doing it. And a teenager will feel the weight of that. If they fail - the person dies - they will feel that they failed. And that's a heavy burden I'm not prepared for my teenager to take on.