Warning signs that a child is in danger

SALISBURY — In a story in the Aug. 20 Lakeville Journal, Mary Marcuccio of the Southington, Conn. group Parents 4 A Change, talked about ways parents can help keep their children safe from drugs.

Parents wondering if their teenagers are using heroin or opiate prescription medications can watch for telltale signs, she said. The group’s Red Flags To Watch For With Opiate Use handout includes these items:

• Missing money and small items like jewelry or household items that have some resale value.

• The user will seem “dopey,†fatigued; the pupils in the eyes are “pinned†and the eyes seem fixed and unresponsive to changes in light; user wears sunglasses indoors or at night.

• The user has a dry mouth; his speech may be slurred.

• The user appears to have itchy skin.

• Be watchful of your child having a lot of visitors who stay for only a brief amount of time.

• “Parents, count your spoons,†said Wayne Kowal of the Connecticut State Police State Wide Narcotics Task Force at a forum held at the Salisbury Congregational Church Thursday, Aug. 20. Spoons are used to melt powdered heroin into an injectable liquid.

• Search the child’s room for small glassine bags, or fragments of the bags; tiny elastic bands (used to hold bags of heroin together in 10-bag bundles); alcohol preparation pads (or their wrappers); cotton balls or small pieces of cotton fiber, as from a cigarette filter.

Marcuccio said she had been finding the small elastic bands for a year before she realized their significance, and told of a male teenager who wore the bands on his fingers, telling his parents it was a new trend.

“They’re teenagers,†said Marcuccio. “They do dumb, weird things. Who knew?â€

For the complete “red flags†list, see parents4achange.net.

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