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Parent Drug Education Talk

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Title: Parent Drug Education Talk


1
Parent Drug Education Talk
  • Campolindo High School April 9, 2009
  • Parent Presentation
  • Ralph Cantor

2
Parent Drug Education Agenda
  • Whats out there
  • The adolescent brain
  • Endorphin model / Reward System
  • Marijuana
  • Alcohol
  • Influencing our children

3
Statistics
4
Adolescent Brain
Adult Brain
5
PreFrontal Cortex
  • Parents, therapists and our task
  • Sometimes need to act as though they are their
    teenagers frontal cortex . . . talking through
    possibilities and options. They have to function
    like a surrogate set of frontal lobes, an
    auxiliary problem solver.

6
Pruning Mylenation
  • USE IT OR LOSE IT Reading, sports, music,
    video games, x-box, hanging outwhatever a
    child/teen is doingthese are the neural synapses
    that will be retained and those not worked get
    pruned away
  • Those neural synapses that are consistently used
    get hardwired in through mylenation

7
Reward System
  • The reward system is responsible for seeking
    natural rewards that have survival value
  • seeking food, water, sex, and nurturing
  • Dopamine is this systems primary neurotransmitter

reward
8
Dopamine ReleaseSynaptic Space
9
Drugs Hijack the Brains Reward Circuitry
  • Immediate effect of drug use is an increase in
    dopamine
  • Continued use of drugs reduces the brains
    dopamine production.
  • Because dopamine is part of the reward system,
    the brain is fooled that the drug has survival
    value for the organism.
  • The reward system responds with drug seeking
    behaviors
  • Craving occurs and, eventually, dependence.

reward
10
Neuroadaptation
  • In direct response to overstimulation, brain
    regions decrease in sensitivity and
    responsiveness. Brain regions become
    unresponsive (deaf) to usual levels of
    stimulation, a process by which the reward and
    pleasure centers of the brain adapt to high
    concentrations of pleasure neurotransmitters
    (tolerance).
  • Under unstimulated conditions (without drugs)
    there is profound interference with the ability
    to experience normal pleasure. When sober, the
    user feels anhedonia, anxiety, anger, frustration
    and craving.
  • In addition to pleasure neuroadaptation, other
    brain pathways stimulated by drugs also become
    underactive, directly leading to anxiety,
    depression, loss of energy.
  • Once neuroadapted, the pleasure system remains
    impaired for months to years, interfering with
    sobriety, learning, and impulse inhibition.

11
Dopamine vs. Serotonin
  • Dopamine produces a feeling of pleasure
  • Serotonin produces a feeling of well being
  • Difference between pleasure and happiness (short
    lived vs big picture)
  • Developing skills, interest, relationships,
    meaning (getting a life)
  • Resiliency

12
Marijuana Receptor Sites
  • Hippocamus
  • Memory, memory, say what, memory
  • Amygdala
  • Novelty Threshold
  • Attention effects
  • Motivation
  • Sensory input
  • Noticing differences
  • Cerebellum
  • Motor Coordination
  • Flow, time ADD
  • Basal Ganglia
  • Reward system
  • The final common pathway for drugs

13
Hippocampus
  • Gateway between short term and long term memory
  • Draws information from long term memory
  • Discriminates relevant new information
  • Trashes unimportant information
  • Stores new information in long term memory

14
Concerns with Marijuana
  • Intrudes on the ecology of the brain at a crucial
    developmental time having an influence on present
    performance and future functioning
  • Hippocampus/Learning
  • Ultimately producing opposite results
  • Gateway to cigarettes
  • Pruning and Neuroadaptation

15
Cannabis
  • WITHDRAWAL
  • Insomnia/nightmares
  • Loss of appetite
  • Anxiety
  • Irritability/anger
  • Depression
  • Tremor
  • Anhedonia
  • EFFECTS
  • Sleep inducing
  • Appetite stimulation
  • Induces calm
  • Induces mellow feelings
  • Elevates mood
  • Reduces muscle tone
  • Produces pleasure

16
Are adolescents more susceptible to alcohol than
adults?
Most certainly YES
  • Reduced sensitivity to intoxication
  • Increased sensitivity to social disinhibitions
  • Greater adverse effects to cognitive functioning

17
Alcohol and Teenagers
  • Date Rape one to two-thirds of teen sexual
    assaults involve alcohol
  • 18 of Females/ 39 Males say it is acceptable
    for a boy to force sex if the girl is stoned or
    drunk
  • 40 of children who start drinking before age 15
    will become alcoholics
  • In television 9 out of 10 drinkers are portrayed
    as having no effects or only positive outcomes
    from their alcohol consumption

18
Whats the big deal about kids drinking anyways???
  • Have you ever seen a group of drunk teenagers?
  • Demeaning behaviors
  • Date rape
  • Accidents
  • Teenage brain effects before 18 yrs old
  • Do we want to continue the level of pain this
    pain and suffering this has caused look what
    have done with cigarette smoking

19
Notes for alcohol
  • Extent of binge drinking
  • The alcohol industry
  • Integrated in society
  • Shifting gears, events, stress substitute
  • Modeling

20
Are you at Risk?
  • Family history of addiction?
  • Do you have a tendency to boredom or ADHD?
  • Are you anxious or depressed?
  • Have you suffered sexual trauma?
  • Do you have an effective way to manage stress?

21
Pleasure Scale
NORMAL RANGE
Dysphoria
Euphoria
22
Risk of addiction
  • How well does the drug work?
  • Positive and Negative Reinforcement
  • If, in addition to producing pleasure (positive
    reinforcement), a drug is more addicting, if it
    relieves negative states boredom, anxiety,
    depression or stress (negative reinforcement).

23
(No Transcript)
24
Promoting Resilience
  • Positive relationship with an adult
  • Positive peer group activities
  • Involvement in faith-based activities
  • Participation in Drama or Music or Dance
  • Taking care of pets
  • Volunteer activities
  • Finding pleasure in daily activities

25
Talk to your child
  • I care, I see, I feel, Listen
  • Clear expectations and consequences
  • Communication Monitoring
  • Integrity Self Assessment Modeling
  • Teen-proof your home
  • Connection

26
Prevention Factors
  • Supportive family (tuned in, time together,
    supervision, fair rules/boundaries)
  • Non using peers and role models
  • Youth are connected (school, activities)
  • Social Skills
  • Resiliency (coping with stress, celebration)

27
Important Website
  • What to do if you suspect your child is using
    drugs or alcohol?
  • What to do if you know your child is using drugs
    or alcohol?
  • http//timetoact.drugfree.org

28
Self Assessment
  • Andrew Weil Unhealthy relationship
  • Ignorance that the substance is a drug and what
    it does to the body
  • Loss of desired effect w/increasing frequency
  • Difficulty separating from the drug
  • Impairment of health or social function

29
Bibliography / References
  • Marijuana Whats a Parent to Believe? Tim
    Cermak 2003, Hazelden
  • Uppers, Downers, All Arounders Darryl Inaba
    1997, CNS Publications
  • Alcohol Whats a Parent to Believe?
  • Stephen Biddulph, 2004, Hazelden
  • Alex Stalcup New Leaf Treament Center NLTC.com

30
Contact Information
  • Ralph Cantor
  • Alameda County Office of Education
  • Drug and Violence Prevention
  • (510) 670-4589
  • rjcantor_at_aol.com
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