Fresh from the newsletter of the Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America (CADCA):
“Earlier this week, the United States Senate passed S. Res. 225, a resolution designating August 2007 as “National Medicine Abuse Awareness Month.” The move comes after recent studies have unveiled an alarming trend among young people who intentionally take large amounts of cough medicine to get ‘high’ from the active ingredient dextromethorphan (DXM).”
Wow. I am moved with the sincerity of this. Somebody pulled a PR move to save a bit of face and decided to tell kids “it’s okay to take drugs in the right amounts for the right reasons”. They already get that message on the television every day. Not to mention the fact that when they go to the doctor now days, they’re told that it’s all “medicine”, in an attempt to lessen the severity of the fact that they’re still drugs.
Yes, kids need to know about the dangers of DXM abuse, but what about teaching parents not to buy it, or stores not to carry it, or companies not to sell it? Hah! Good luck with that one. “Why would we sacrifice billions of dollars for kids’ well-being when we can spend a few million on some public service announcements?” That should be the slogan for drug makers. I actually saw a commercial today for Celexa that was practically bragging that it hadn’t been pulled off the market yet, and that other drugs in the category were just as dangerous, so why not buy some if it kills the arthritis pain?! Why didn’t they just stay “We didn’t get caught yet, so we’re going to try and squeaze a bouple billion more dollars out of consumers before we have to pay dearly like Vioxx”?