UNIT 2: LESSON #2 WARNING SIGNS OF USING/ABUSING SUBSTANCES

Similar documents
QUESTION 1. What is a drug? ANSWER: A drug is any substance that affects the way you think, act, and/or feel.

take no for an answer? What can you do in those situations? do? If you think you need new friends, where can you find them?

Chapter 13. Types of Drugs and Their Effects. Unit 5: Drug Use and Abuse. Key Terms. What Are Drugs?

teen drug use Percent of 12th-graders Who Used A Substance in the Past Month (Type of Drug & Prevalence): 13% 33% 11% 23%

3. What is the most common form in which tobacco is used? Name three other tobacco products.

THE MEDICINE ABUSE PROJECT:

Lesson 2 Alcohol: What s the Truth?

What I Want From Treatment User Information

WHAT I GOT FROM TREATMENT (2.0) William R. Miller & Janice M. Brown

In the Age of Alcohol

Name: _Stacy Hall. Grade Level: _7th. Unit / Content Area:_Personal Health and Physical Activity. Lesson Title: _A Healthy Body, A Healthy Weight

For groups of young people aged 15 to 21

How Well Do You Know Tompkins County Youth?

Question: I m worried my child is using illegal drugs, what should I do about it?

TEEN EDUCATION. Medication Safety for Teens.

FLAME TEEN HANDOUT Week 9 - Addiction

Teens who consistently learn about the risks of drugs from their parents are up to 50% less likely to use drugs than those who don t.

Directed Reading. Lesson: Understanding Teens and Alcohol WHY TEENS DRINK. Lesson: Alcohol and Your Body ALCOHOL IN YOUR BODY

Lesson 1 (pg )

Quick Start Guide for Video Chapter 2: What Is Addiction?

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons

Associates of Behavioral Health Northwest CHILD/ADOLESCENT PSYCHOSOCIAL ASSESSMENT

High School Health Education Curriculum Guide

ALCOHOL AND YOU Alcohol

Legal and Illegal Substances

SUBSTANCE ABUSE UNIT UNIT PACKET NAME: PERIOD: SCORE:

PREVENTING PREGNANCY: TALKING ABOUT AND USING CONTRACEPTION

Tobacco, Alcohol, Drugs. Chapter 11, 12, & 13

Summary of Highlights Tompkins County Spring, 2017

Children who learn about the risks of drugs from their parents are much less likely to use them.

College Students and the! Misuse, Abuse and Diversion of! ADHD Prescription Stimulant Medications

Allegany Rehabilitation Associates Personalized Recovery Oriented Services. PROS Service: CRS Wellness Self-Management Coping Skill Training

Illinois State University (Online)

Core Alcohol and Drug Survey - Long Form. Consortium Number = Institution Number = Number of Surveys =

National Data

Core Alcohol and Drug Survey - Long Form. Consortium Number = Institution Number = Number of Surveys = 6905

Core Alcohol and Drug Survey - Long Form. Consortium Number = Institution Number = Number of Surveys = 56937

ALCOHOL AWARENESS DISCUSSION LEADER S OUTLINE. Good morning my name is. Today we will be talking about alcohol awareness.

Legalize it? An ESL Speaking Lesson for Level Ken Peters

National Data

Drug Prevention: Health & Opioid Prevention Education (HOPE) Curriculum

The Impact of the Opioid Crisis on Children

5 Signs Your Child is Using Drugs or Alcohol:

University of North Carolina Chapel Hill (online)

Illinois State University (Online)

Introducing Cannabis Risk, Laws and Habits

Lesson 8 Setting Healthy Eating & Physical Activity Goals

Delirium: Information for Patients and Families

Issaquah School District. Highlights from the Healthy Youth Survey (March 1, 2015)

A guide to help you talk to your teen about alcohol, marijuana, and prescription pain medications. You, your teen, and Substance Use

WG Fresh Start manual. A guide to getting you on the road to a fresh start. P15630 Quit Manual.indd 1 03/08/ :48

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA TOWARDS NO TOBACCO USE (TNT) STUDENT SURVEY POSTTEST

The Power of School Connectedness

Substance Abuse Affects Families

BASIC VOLUME. Elements of Drug Dependence Treatment

FASD Prevention and Health Promotion Resources

Tacoma School District. Highlights from the Healthy Youth Survey (March 1, 2017)

Teen Prescription Drug Abuse. Animated Video Discussion Guide. About this Guide. Animated Video Discussion Guide

Tobacco Use Percent (%)

How to empower your child against underage drinking

A Guide to Help You Reduce and Stop Using Tobacco

In their Eyes: An Average Child s View of their World

EVEN IF YOU KNOW ABOUT DRINKING OR DRUGS. Simple Questions. Straight Answers.

My Weight (Assessment)

Substance Misuse and Abuse

USING ASSERTIVENESS TO COMMUNICATE ABOUT SEX

Parenting Your Teen in 2016

Impact of drug use on future

Facts About Alcohol. 2.1 million students between the ages of drove under the influence of alcohol last year

SUBSTANCE ABUSE INTERVENTION AND PREVENTION

A Coach s Guide to Spit Tobacco Education

Anti-smoking vaccine developed

Drugs & Alcohol. Lesson. By Carone Fitness. Drugs & Alcohol

Guide to Helping Your Loved One Accept and Discover ADDICTION RECOVERY

Section 17.4 Choosing to Be Drug Free

Presented by Wendy Rawlings MS LMHC I Can Do This Can t I?

Substance Prevention

Stress and Your Body Katie Seleskie, Katy McClure. Overview

Appendix D The Social Development Strategy

Take The Pledge! Underage Alcohol Use. By James L. Holly, MD. Your Life Your Health. The Examiner. May 11, 2006

CATCH My Breath: High School Session 2: Making Our Own Choices

Choosing Life: Empowerment, Action, Results! CLEAR Menu Sessions. Substance Use Risk 2: What Are My External Drug and Alcohol Triggers?

Chapter 13. Objectives. Explain how drugs affect people. Describe how reactions to a drug can vary. Lesson 1 Facts About Drugs

MetroWest Adolescent Health Survey

Substance Prevention

Session 2: Alcohol and Recovery 2-1

Patient Questionnaire. Name: Date: A. What are the main concerns or problems that brought you here today?

Autism in U.S. children on the rise

Underage Drinking. Underage Drinking Statistics

What are they? Why do people take these drugs?

Do not write below this line DSM IV Code: Primary Secondary. Clinical Information

1 4 Youth. 6 or more 2018 RISE ABOVE COLORADO YOUTH SURVEY 37 % 17 % 2 % 4 % SUBSTANCE USE COLORADO YOUTH 2018 PERCEIVED RISK ACCESS

HELLO CAN YOU HEAR ME?

COUNSELING INTAKE FORM

We admitted that we were powerless over alcohol that our lives had become unmanageable.

Youth Opioid Study: Attitudes and Usage Young Adults Ages 18 to 24 in the United States

Grade 7 Lesson Substance Use and Gambling Information

Do I Have a Drinking Problem?

Transcription:

UNIT 2: LESSON #2 WARNING SIGNS OF USING/ABUSING SUBSTANCES SPECIFIC EXPECTATIONS By the end of grade 8, students will: MATERIALS Healthy Living - C1.3 Identify and describe the warning signs of substance misuse or abuse, addictions, and related behaviours (e.g., changes in behaviour, gradual withdrawal from social circles, a drop in academic performance) and the consequences that can occur (e.g., aggressive behaviours related to alcohol use that can lead to gender-based violence, dating violence, or sexual assault; financial problems resulting from online gambling; overdose as a result of misuse of prescription medications, including pain relievers; inability to make good decisions as a result of drug use; binge drinking and alcohol poisoning; injury, death, or legal charges resulting from accidents caused by impaired driving; self harming behaviours, including cutting, related to mental illnesses such as depression that are exacerbated by substance abuse; fetal alcohol spectrum disorder [FASD] in children as a result of alcohol abuse by the mother during pregnancy). Students will need their homework sheet: Drug Categories (1.4 H) Drug Use Continuum (2.0 H) Answers: Drug Use Continuum (2.0 REF) ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR TEACHERS Students will have an opportunity to consider why people move from one area of the drug use continuum to the next, as well as looking at the indicators/warning signs that someone is using/abusing drugs. TECHNOLOGY OPTIONS A drug use continuum could be created on the SMARTboard so that students could add their information to the SMARTboard as it is discussed in class. In addition, the teacher could provide clips from the internet demonstrating some of the behaviours of people who are misusing/abusing drugs. TEACHING/LEARNING STRATEGIES INTRODUCTION TO LESSON

Explain to students that in today s lesson the focus will be on the reasons people use/abuse drugs, as well as considering how we can tell that someone is using/abusing substances. ACTIVITY #1 - HOMEWORK Ask students to take out their homework sheet, Drug Categories (1.4 H) from the previous lesson. Have students exchange their sheet with a partner. Explain to students that they must complete their partner s sheet, and then hand it back to their partner to be checked for accuracy. Once all students have had an opportunity to complete the activity, ask student volunteers to identify the items they had placed in the yes column for the following categories: hallucinogens and stimulants. (5-10 min) ACTIVITY #2 - DRUG USE CONTINUUM Hand out a copy of the Drug Use Continuum (2.0 H) to each student. Explain to students that people sometimes move from one part of the continuum to another, based on a variety of reasons. Have student volunteers read each stage of the continuum, along with the description of each stage. (3 min) Ask students to work with a partner in order to discuss why a person would move from being a non-user to an experimental user, and then from an experimental user to any of the other stages. In the text box between each stage, students should record their ideas as to why this movement occurs. (10 min) Take up suggestions offered by students as to why a person moves from one stage to the next. Refer to Answers: Drug Use Continuum (2.0 REF). Explain to students that moving from one stage to the next can be based on any number of factors including: issues with peers, trying to fit in, media influence, family issues, etc. It also should be noted that there is no particular progression from stage to stage. (10 min) ACTIVITY #3 - WARNING SIGNS OF MISUSE/ABUSE OF DRUGS AND OTHER RELATED ADDICTIVE BEHAVIOURS INSIDE OUTSIDE CIRCLE STRATEGY (10-15 MIN) Divide the class into halves. Ask one half of the class to form a circle that faces out. Assign each student from the other half of the class to a partner who has already taken a place on the circle. This second half of the class actually will be forming a circle that faces the inside circle. There should now be one circle facing out and the other circle facing in toward those students, and all students should be paired with a classmate. Explain to students that now that we have considered why students might move from one stage of the continuum to the next, we also need to be aware of the warning signs that someone we know is abusing or misusing drugs. Explain to students that you are going to ask a question and you would like them to just think to themselves for about 10 seconds before saying anything.

Ask the question: If someone you know is using or abusing drugs, what kinds of changes in behaviour might you notice in them when it comes to anything that is school related? After students have had about 10-15 seconds to think to themselves, ask that the outside circle speaks first. They will tell their partner their ideas and then ask that the inside circle adds to their ideas. Ask if there are groups that would like to share their responses with the larger group. Some possible responses could be: skipping school, drop in grades, being rude to teachers, hanging out in the smoking pit between classes, etc. Ask students on the outside circle to move two spaces right. Continue with the same process as outlined above by asking the following questions, taking them up each time, and then having students move each time before the next question. Questions and possible responses: o If someone you know is misusing/abusing drugs, what kinds of behaviour changes might you see with respect to the person s friendships? (Possible responses: withdrawal from certain peer groups, change in peer group, possibly attending more parties, possibly borrowing money from friends, etc.) o If someone you know is misusing/abusing drugs, what kinds of behaviour changes might you see with respect to the person s general appearance and behaviours? (Possible responses: looking tired, lack of care about appearance, tired, possible self-harm and mental health issues, etc.) o If someone you know is misusing/abusing drugs, what kinds of behaviour changes might you notice with respect to how the person interacts with his/her family? (Possible responses: spends less time with family, avoids family functions, possibly steals alcohol or money for drugs, etc.) Summarize this lesson by explaining to students that although the person who is misusing/abusing drugs often thinks they are just having fun and that they are the same person they always were, it actually is quite easy to recognize the many changes that take place. In addition, many of these same changes in behaviour are apparent when people are involved with other types of addictions, such as online gambling and technology addiction. There are a lot of withdrawal types of behaviours associated with these addictions because they need to find the time alone to feed their addiction, which means they need to remove themselves from many social situations. It is important that we are aware of the behaviour changes because we see our friends every day and we might be the first person to recognize that they need some help.

2.0 H DRUG USE CONTINUUM Non Use: Never used a particular drug. Experimental Use: Has tried a substance once or several times. Use is motivated by curiosity about the drug effect and peer influence. Occasional Use: Use is infrequent and irregular, usually confined to special occasions (holidays, birthdays, etc.) or when opportunities present themselves directly. Availability, accessibility and affordability influence use. Regular Use: Use has a predictable pattern, which may entail frequent or infrequent use. The user actively seeks to experience the drug effect, or to participate in the drug-taking activities of the peer group. Usually s/he feels in control of the drug use. (i.e. s/he can take it or leave it) Dependence Use: Use is regular and predictable, and usually frequent. The user experiences a physiological and/or psychological need for the drug. S/he feels out of control in relation to its use, and will continue to use despite adverse consequences. Drugs often are used when alone, and daily activities may be planned around drug use. (ADAPTED FROM: OPHEA HEALTH AND PHYSICAL EDUCATION: GRADE 9-10 MODULE 3 SUBSTANCE USE AND ABUSE, P. 34)

2.0 REF ANSWERS - DRUG USE CONTINUUM Non Use: Experimental Use: Occasional Use: Never used a particular drug. - see parents doing it - easy access to substance - friends talking about having tried it - satisfy curiosity Has tried a substance once or several times. Use is motivated by curiosity about the drug effect and peer influence. - see teens using on TV - music videos show frequent substance use in videos (imitate role models) - see it as the norm to do at parties - to fit in - feel pressured because it is perceived that friends are doing it - don t see it as harmful so use substances with friends and family - parents allow it as long as they do it in their home - to rebel or defy parents - to deal with shyness or lack of confidence - to create a positive social image Use is infrequent and irregular, usually confined to special occasions (holidays, birthdays, etc.) or when opportunities present themselves directly. Availability, accessibility and affordability influence use. - boredom - to seem more mature - no harm in having a little fun - perception that this is the only way to have some fun. - friends do it - to gain attention from family or friends - to be able to talk with strangers or feel comfortable in large groups - to control pain - to control weight - to stay awake

Regular Use: Use has a predictable pattern, which may entail frequent or infrequent use. The user actively seeks to experience the drug effect, or to participate in the drug-taking activities of the peer group. Usually s/he feels in control of the drug use. (i.e. s/he can take it or leave it) - has become a habit - to avoid loneliness - stressful events in life - boredom - friends use all the time - low self esteem, feeling of worthlessness - to avoid family arguments or family problems - to stay awake - to feel more creative - to forget disappointments Dependence Use: Use is regular and predictable and usually frequent. The user experiences a physiological and/or psychological need for the drug. S/he feels out of control in relation to its use, and will continue to use despite adverse consequences. Drugs are often used alone and daily activities may be planned around drug use. (ADAPTED FROM: OPHEA HEALTH AND PHYSICAL EDUCATION: GRADE 9-10 MODULE 3 SUBSTANCE USE AND ABUSE, P. 34)