Surprising Kids Killer: Methadone
Tracy Smith On Drug Now Prescribed As Painkiller That's Taking Lives
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Play CBS Video Video Painkiller Killing Kids A painkiller rarely mentioned in drug warnings for kids is now the No. 1 drug that kills young people in several states. Tracy Smith's report on methadone reveals how kids are abusing it and dying.
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Video Combating Methadone Abuse Methadone use is on the rise among teenagers, especially in Florida. Tracy Smith looks at a program that officials hope will encourage teens to stay away from the drug.
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(CBS/The Early Show)
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Jasa Snyder died from a methadone overdose, the local medical examiner said. (CBS/The Early Show)
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Interactive Substance Abuse In America Get the facts on a national problem. Find out where to get help, learn how drugs affect the body and compare state drunk-driving laws.
Then medical examiner's report said Jasa had succumbed to an overdose of methadone.
In part because it's not as heavily regulated as drugs such as OxyContin, Smith says, teenagers find methadone in their parents' medicine chests, sometimes with fatal results.
Methadone kills more young people in Florida than any other drug, Smith notes.
"The one prescription drug that keeps going up in terms of the absolute numbers of deaths and rates of increase, particularly for children, is methadone," says Jim McDonough, the former director of the Florida Office of Drug Control. "The facts are, it's murderous. Look at the death rate. It's absolutely out of control."
One reason, Smith says: Methadone stays in the system for days. So, every drink or drug taken afterwards can cause a lethal reaction. And too often, teens have no idea what they're taking.
Michael Petrillo of the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office told Smith, "Before you go to a party, you go through your mom and dad's medicine cabinet and you take all different pills. And you walk in and just dump them in a bowl. And people just help themselves to pills in the bowl."
Undercover agents showed Smith just how easy methadone was to get, taking her with them on a methadone buy/sting in Lake Worth, Fla., where they quickly purchased methadone pills.
Each was 40 milligrams, and cost $20, Smith said. Each had indentations separating it into quarters, and the normal dose is probably a quarter of a pill, Smith said. But, "Kids don't know that. They take the whole thing, and that's how they end up dead."
Snyder may never know how much methadone killed Jasa, but even knowing that wouldn't bring back the son whose ashes she keeps in a locket around her neck, close to her heart.
Said Snyder: "People say to me, 'Why don't you just move on?' You never move on. You just go on every day."
On Tuesday, Smith looks at a program that's scaring kids straight when it comes to methadone.
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