Prescription drug misuse poses a significant risk to youth health and safety. Health care professionals play a critical role in preventing and mitigating prescription drug misuse and addiction, as well as in treating young people who have become addicted to these drugs.
Not only do you prescribe these medications, but you are viewed as highly credible sources of information and advice about medications as well as substance use and addiction. You are in the unique position to encourage apprehensive patients to discuss prescription drug misuse and guide them toward healthy choices and, if needed, effective treatment options.
If you haven’t already reviewed our information on the many causes and concerns surrounding medication misuse, it’s a good place to start before diving into your specific role as a health care provider.
How you can safeguard against youth prescription drug misuse
The following are important steps you can take to help prevent prescription drug misuse and promote the health and well-being of young people.
Know the facts
Regardless of specialty, it’s important to understand the many ways in which prescription drug misuse can compromise health and exacerbate existing physical and mental health conditions. Try to understand why young people misuse medications and what the individual, family, social and environmental factors are that put some at higher risk of misuse and addiction than others.
The more young patients and their parents turn to you for information and support, the better informed the public will be about the risks of prescription drug misuse and how best to intervene when it occurs. Knowing a patient’s family medical and social history, whether the patient has co-occurring mental health disorders, and how prescription medications are used and talked about in the home, and how they are stored and monitored, are important for helping to protect youth who may be susceptible.
Educate patients and their caregivers
Some parents and caregivers choose to avoid discussing substance use with their children, making it critical for health professionals to step up and be a credible source of information to young patients and their families. It is important to educate all patients and their caregivers, on a routine basis and regardless of perceived risk level, about the danger of prescription drug misuse and how best to prevent and reduce it. Messages should be clear, based in science and research rather than intuition or anecdote, and individualized for each patient and family’s unique circumstances.
Prescribe carefully and monitor patient medication use and symptoms regularly
Whenever possible and appropriate, offer non-prescription medication alternatives to treat young people for pain and mental health problems. Keeping these powerful drugs out of the hands of young people is the first step in preventing addiction and stopping them from reaching unintended users. In the event an opioid pain reliever or other controlled substance is absolutely necessary, try to prescribe conservatively, starting out with the lowest therapeutic dosage in low quantities and for the shortest possible duration. Patients should be reassessed for potential benefits versus harms of continued use if the dosage or duration is being adjusted. The prescriber education initiative, Search and Rescue, is a helpful resource and provides health care professionals with tools to help patients with medication misuse and addiction.
Screen and intervene
Screening young patients for prescription drug misuse is one of the most important measures a health care professional can take.[1] The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends the Screening, Brief Intervention and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) approach as part of all pediatric primary care routine visits and has prepared an extensive list of resources for addressing the opioid epidemic with young patients.
Depending on the extent of the patient’s prescription drug misuse, a number of intervention and treatment options are available. One consistent research finding is that including the family, when possible, in all stages of the intervention and treatment process is highly beneficial and yields the best outcomes for young patients.[2] Brief advice from the clinician alone may be sufficient for some patients, while full treatment might be appropriate for others. Treatment typically involves age-appropriate psychosocial therapies, such as cognitive-behavioral therapy, motivational enhancement therapy and family interventions. There also is a range of medications that have been approved for the treatment of opioid use disorder, are highly effective in treatment and are recommended for use in severe cases by the American Academy of Pediatrics.
Support research and advocacy
It is important to advocate for appropriate media modeling of prescription drug consumption and its consequences, as well as policies and regulations that protect youth from access to and use of these drugs. Support funding for quality research into the prevention, intervention and treatment of youth prescription drug misuse, as well as family involvement in all aspects of care to ensure optimum outcomes for young patients.
Resources to share with parents and caregivers
In addition to a family version of this guide, designed to help parents and caregivers understand the risk of medication misuse and how to protect their children from its harms, we offer a wide variety of printable e-Books and guides, a sample of which are included below.
Parent e-Books & Guides
Preventing and addressing addiction is a learning process. Materials are designed to be printed and used as a frequent reference.
The Parent Talk Kit
Get tips for talking and what to say to help prevent substance use, including addressing prescription and over-the-counter medications.
Medication Disposal Guide
Ridding your home of unused or expired medication can help create a healthier and safer environment for yourself and your loved ones.
Six Parenting Practices
A guide to parenting practices which research shows to help reduce the chances of young people developing issues with drugs or alcohol.