WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow...

49
WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer Hours Due June 10 2 Weeks from tomorrow

Transcript of WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow...

Page 1: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

WEEK 16: MAY 26-29

Important Reminders:• Grades were updated on Thursday• Posters Due Tomorrow• Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week

• 10 Volunteer Hours Due June 10• 2 Weeks from tomorrow

Page 2: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

DAY 74: MAY 26 Objective: Students will identify and describe the effects of drug use. Warm-Up: What are the reasons people start using drugs? Activities:Test ResultsTobacco Notes

Page 3: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

UP IN SMOKE

Smoking Facts and Stats

Page 4: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.
Page 5: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

DID YOU KNOW…•About 440,000 Americans die of nicotine-related diseases (emphysema, lung cancer, heart disease) In fact, smoking kills more Americans each year than alcohol, cocaine, crack, heroin, homicide, suicide, car crashes, fires and AIDS combined. •Smoking also causes impotence. •1 pack a day = 7 years of lost life. The good news is that the body recovers much of that time when a person quits.•Cigarettes have a 30-minute half life.

Page 6: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

DID YOU KNOW…

•Nicotine decreases blood flow to the heart, while increasing blood pressure and heart rate. •Smoking also hardens arteries so they cannot expand and contract normally.•A person is 400 times more likely to drop dead while smoking if at chronic risk.

Page 7: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

DID YOU KNOW…

•Nicotine is a Class A carcinogen. It damages everything it comes in direct contact with (mouth, tongue, lungs, trachea, esophagus, stomach, bladder, prostate, etc.)•There are 400 other carcinogens in cigarettes.

Page 8: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

CDC SAYS… (HOOKAH)

•The charcoal used to heat tobacco produces high levels of carbon monoxide, metals, and carcinogens•A 1-hour-long session = 200 puffs, (an average cigarette = 20 puffs)•Less risky? NOT!

Page 9: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

DID YOU KNOW…

•One dose of smokeless tobacco has more nicotine than a cigarette.•Most smokers begin their habit at around age 12-14.•Teenagers are at great risk for smoking related diseases because their immune systems are underdeveloped.

Page 10: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

AND DID YOU KNOW….

•Companies have clever marketing programs to draw in new smokers. To maintain their market share, these companies must attract 2 million new smokers each year.•There are some very effective programs to help people quit.

Page 11: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

AND THE COST!•Question: If an average pack of cigarettes costs $5.00 ($9), what is the annual cost to a pack-a-day smoker? •Answer: $1,825. ($3,285)•If a person didn’t smoke from age 15 until age 65 and saved all that money instead, how much would he or she have? •Answer: $91,250 ($164,250)

Page 12: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

AND NOW FOR SOMETHING TRULY AMAZING…

•If a person invested that $5.00 a day into an investment account (mutual fund, index fund, etc.), and if that account earned an average of 10% interest compounded over the same period of time….•That same person would have about $2.5 million at age 65.•If you consider the true cost of cigarettes today (about $9) and you invested that much, it would be about $4.1 million.

Page 13: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

SOURCES

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Familydoctor.org

Investor.gov

Page 14: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

DAY 75: MAY 27

Objective: Identify the dangers . Warm-up: What are 3 risks of drinking alcohol before the age of 21? Activities:Poster Due TodayMarijuana NotesThe Chemistry of Addiction

Page 15: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

MARIJUANA A Harmless Drug?

Page 16: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

COSTS OF SUBSTANCE ABUSE: NIDA

Page 17: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

WHAT THE RESEARCH SHOWS -- 2012

Page 18: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

WHAT THE RESEARCH SHOWS -- 2014

Page 19: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

Lifetime Marijuana UsePercent of students who report having ever used marijuana

|

RENTON SCHOOL DISTRICT- SOURCE: 2014 HEALTHY YOUTH SURVEY

19

Page 20: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

WHAT IS IT?

•It comes from the hemp plant (cannabis sativa) that contains active ingredient delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). •There are hundreds of hybrid varieties•It can be taken in a variety of forms•There are FDA approved prescription medicines that contain THC or marijuana derivatives, such as Marinol, Cesamet, Canasol, Sativex, and Epidolex for specific conditions

Page 21: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

TWO MAIN TYPES; LOTS OF VARIETIESSativa•Mainly affects mind•Uplifting or euphoric

Indica•Mainly affects body•Heavy feeling and/or “body melt”

Page 22: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

OTHER FORMS – CONCENTRATES: 70-90%+ THC Extracted THC from leaves and stems

Butane Hash Oil (BHO)DabsWax

Tinctures – extracted with alcohol

Ripped from the Headlines:Hash oil explosions prompt proposed changes in pot statesFederal charges in fatal Bellevue hash-oil explosion and fireAmateur hash-oil production, explosions bound to continue

Page 23: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

EDIBLES: RECIPE FOR DISASTER

•Inconsistent THC

•Poor labeling, serving size

•Overconsumption due to taste

•Delayed onset (hours)

•Slow burn-off

•Accidental pet & child ingestion

•Food safety violations

•Denver Marijuana Deaths

Page 24: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

IMPAIRED DRIVING

•Illegal to drive impaired•Legal limit is 5 nanograms of THC/ml•Requires a blood test (not breath)•Blood can be drawn on reasonable suspicion

Marilyn Huestis of NIDA, who conducted a recently published study on marijuana use and psychomotor function, says “The level of 5 nanograms per mil is pretty high,” she said. “We know that people are impaired at lower levels than 5, but the balancing act is trying to find a number that can reliably separate (the impaired from the not-impaired), which is almost impossible to do.”

Page 25: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

HOW MUCH IS ALLOWED?Medical 24 ounces

15 plants

60 day supply

Zero Minor DUI

Recreational 1 ounce dried

16 ounces of edibles

7 grams of concentrate

Zero Minor DUI

Still Illegal under Federal Law

Page 26: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

SPECIAL DANGERS

Is often laced with other drugs or chemicals, such as PCP, formaldehyde and crack cocaine Resulted in several deaths. Headlines: “Woman ODs on pot gummy berries in Central Ore.”

“Deaths Prompt Colorado Crackdown on Pot Infused Food”

“An overdose doesn’t always mean death. There can be lasting physical effects.”

Page 27: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.
Page 28: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.
Page 29: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

OTHER EFFECTS

•Impaired attention

•Disrupted working memory

•Drowsiness

•Paranoia

•Relaxed inhibitions

•Disorientation

•Fluctuating emotions

•Reduced motor skills

•Increased appetite

•Body tremors

•Dry mouth/throat

•Panic attacks

•Vital signs changes

•Green/brown teeth & tongue

Page 30: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

Source: American College of Pediatricians

Page 31: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.
Page 32: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

DOES MARIJUANA CAUSE SCHIZOPHRENIA?•We know that 50% of newly diagnosed schizophrenia patients have used marijuana, but this is correlation, not causation.•Truth: We don’t know for sure•Common Sense: Protect your brain!

Page 33: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

LONG-TERM EFFECTS

•It can be psychologically and physically addictive•It damages nerve cells and can cause permanent damage in the part of the brain responsible for learning, memory and motivation. Source: NIDA•Study: Psychomotor Function in Chronic Daily Cannabis Smokers during Sustained Abstinence

Page 35: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

QUICK QUIZ

How long does marijuana stay in the user's body? a) About one dayb) About one yearc) About one monthd) Forever

Page 36: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

FACT

The correct answer is C. THC in marijuana is stored in fat cells. Generally, traces of THC can be detected in urine several days after smoking. In heavy users, traces can sometimes be detected for weeks after they have stopped using marijuana.

Page 37: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

IMPAIRMENT RISKS

Since marijuana can affect judgment and decision-making, using it can lead to risky sexual behavior, resulting in exposure to sexually transmitted diseases like HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.

Page 38: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

THREE CATEGORIES OF MEDICAL DRUGS Preventive Curative Palliative

Page 39: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

MEDICAL USE # 1: NAUSEA PREVENTION

Marijuana has been used to reduce nausea, especially after chemotherapy.

HOWEVER…"THC and smoked marijuana are considerably less effective than currently available therapies to treat acute nausea and vomiting."

-- The American Medical Association

Page 40: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

MEDICAL USE #2: GLAUCOMA

•Glaucoma is an eye disease that mainly affects older people. It is a progressive disease in which pressure on the optic nerve gradually reduces vision until a person is blind. Marijuana has been used to relieve pressure on the optic nerve.

"...it’s well known that smoking marijuana can reduce pressure within the eye, but the drug may also reduce the blood supply to the optic nerve - the last thing a glaucoma sufferer needs - and it doesn’t seem to prevent blindness. ‘In order to substantially reduce eye pressure,’ says Dr. Harry Quigley of John Hopkins University’s Wilmer Eye Institute, ‘you’d have to be stoned all the time.’"

Page 41: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

MEDICAL USE # 3: AIDS WASTING

Marijuana has been used for stimulating appetite in AIDS patients

"THC is moderately effective in the treatment of AIDS wasting, but its long duration of action and intensity of side effects preclude routine use."   American Medical Association

Also, one of THC’s effects is to suppress the immune system.

Page 42: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

MEDICAL USE #4:CHRONIC PAIN

"Controlled evidence does not support the view that THC or smoked marijuana offer clinically effective analgesia (pain killer) without causing significant adverse events."   American Medical Association,

Page 43: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

GOOD MEDICINE?

Not really. Marijuana cures NOTHING, and there are other medications that are more effective with fewer side effects for ALL conditions for which it is used.

Page 44: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

DANGEROUS?

It’s your call. YOU decide whether you want to risk low achievement, stunted emotional growth, distorted sex characteristics and permanent brain damage.

Remember: You’re the one who has to live with you.

What kind of LIFE do you choose?

Page 45: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

A FEW LAST WORDS

Lower grades Higher drop-out rates Self-reported lower life satisfaction Self-reported lower achievement CNN- Teens & Marijuana Problem

Page 48: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

DAY 76: MAY 28 Objective: Identify the hazards related to substance abuse. Warm-up: What are three long-term affects related to marijuana use? Activities:The House That Crack BuiltPoster Gallery Walk

Page 49: WEEK 16: MAY 26-29 Important Reminders: Grades were updated on Thursday Posters Due Tomorrow Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco Unit concludes this week 10 Volunteer.

DAY 77: MAY 29 Objective: Identify the hazards related to substance abuse. Warm-up: What is the average age someone starts smoking? Activities:Poster Gallery WalkProject Self-Evaluation