Archive for November, 2008

Illicit Prescription Stimulant Abuse Among Young Adult Students to Enhance Academic Performance

Currently in the United States, the culture of young adult education is changing due to an increase in the illicit use of prescription stimulants for the purpose of enhancing academic performance.  This illicit use is largely due to the “expression of a basic human drive to stimulate the human organism beyond its normal metabolic state” (Mosher and Akins 63).  Students illicitly take prescription stimulants to enhance their academic performance with the following motives:  to get more energy, enhance alertness, improve concentration, and delay the need of sleep.   The main prescription stimulants that are illicitly used by students today are methylphenidate, commonly known as Ritalin, and a combination of dextroamphetamine and amphetamine, commonly known as Adderall.

            The prescription stimulant drug illicitly used most frequently is Ritalin.  According to Drugs and Drug Policy, Ritalin was discovered accidentally during the 1950s in Rhode Island.  It was given to children to help with their headaches, but resulted in “an increase in their activity level and also improved their academic performance” (Mosher and Akins 82).  In 1961, the FDA approved Ritalin for sale in the United States.  Ritalin was the first prescription drug used to treat attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and continues to “dominate the market in prescriptions written for ADHD” (Levinthal 111).  Ritalin has a rapid onset and relatively short duration of effects.  When taken to treat ADHD in school age children, Ritalin is taken in two doses per day.

            A single dose of Adderall, the other prescription stimulant illicitly used by an immense population of young adult students, has effects lasting longer than Ritalin and has a slower onset and drop-off of effects.  School age children that are prescribed time release Adderall usually only need one dose per day to function normally.  With this drug, the dose increments are slow and gradual, allowing for the drug to have a more consistent concentration in the body at a given time.  Adderall is still a relatively young drug.  It was released for sale in 1996, so it is no surprise that it is not as widely used as Ritalin which is nearly half a century old.  Since there are more Ritalin prescriptions written, it is the more prevalent stimulant prescription on college campuses, making it the dominant choice to enhance academic performance due to its higher availability rate.

            The effects of Ritalin and Adderall on the body and mind are practically identical, due to their related properties.  Ritalin is an amphetamine-like drug and Adderall is an amphetamine derived drug.  When taken orally, both drugs produce a “slow but steady increase in dopamine activity in the brain” (Levinthal 111).  This increased activity of dopamine causes there to be “an improvement in attention and decreased distractibility” and may also “heighten one’s motivation with regard to a particular task, enhancing the salience and interest in that task and improving performance” (Levinthal 112).  No wonder students are using these drugs illicitly to enhance academic performance, right?

            The use of these prescription stimulants not only provides students with a way to study more efficiently and effectively, but it also does not have the drug behavior context and reputation of other illicit usage of drugs.  Ritalin and Adderall are “seen as less risky and ‘cleaner’ than illegal drugs” (Mosher and Akins 176).  They are made in government approved laboratories, prescribed by licensed physicians, dispensed by pharmacies, and contained in a labeled bottle.  The use of someone else’s prescription drugs seems innocent, strategic, and legitimate; not illegal, irresponsible, and dangerous. 

            An individual’s consumption of a prescription drug that is not directly prescribed to them is in fact illegal, irresponsible, and dangerous.  According to the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), the distribution or dispersion and the acquiring or obtaining of prescription drugs are both illegal and punishable by law.  Some other factors that make illicit prescription stimulant use irresponsible and dangerous are that an individual illicit user cannot be 100% positive that the source of the prescription stimulant is legitimate.  If the drugs are bought from or given to the user by a friend, it is more likely that those drugs are in fact the prescription stimulant the user wanted, but it cannot be certain.  There is much room for human error in the drug culture.  That friend may have grabbed the wrong pills or mistaken the type of pill the illicit user wanted.  It is also never certain how an individual will react to any drug.  All drug consumption and effects are situational.  A student may take Ritalin in order to improve their focus, but end up having too much energy and hyperactivity to focus.  Illicit drug use and abuse is trial and error in most cases.

            Illicit prescription stimulant use not only produces the favored effects previously discussed, but it also can cause detrimental effects.  Some detrimental effects of long term prescription stimulant abuse that make Ritalin and Adderall risky drugs to abuse include “racing heart, nausea, headaches, and insomnia, and prolonged or heavy abuse may result in a state of ‘paranoid psychosis identical to that of chronic methamphetamine abuse’” (Mosher and Akins 82).  According to Drugs and Drug Policy, there is little difference in the effects of Ritalin, cocaine, and methamphetamine.  A feeling of euphoria, which is also related to increased levels of dopamine activity in the brain, is usually only seen when the drugs are administered through snorting, injection, and smoking.  This feeling can lead to an increased chance of addiction to the drugs.  Users do not want to feel the drop from prescription stimulants, so they keep taking the stimulants in order to continuously feel the positive effects of the drugs.  This continuous intake of prescription stimulants leads to dependence and addiction.  It may be perceived that the illicit use of Ritalin and Adderall is less risky than the illicit use of other drugs, but that perception would have a huge gap between it and actuality.

Illicitly using prescription stimulants to enhance academic performance is most prevalent among college students.  In a recent study, it was found that “college students (5.7%) reported higher rates of non-medical use of methylphenidate (Ritalin) than their same-age peers not attending college (2.5%)” (McCabe et al. 97).  As Teter states, “it may be the common features of the college environment (e.g., staying awake for extended periods of time) that lead to higher rates of illicit use of prescription stimulants” (258).

The overall prevalence of illicit use of prescription drugs in the college environment varies according to what individual study at which particular university is being evaluated.  When research was conducted at only one university, the percentage of students that have illicitly used prescription stimulants in their lifetime ranged from 8.1%-20%.  In a national survey, it was found that approximately 6.9% of college students had illicitly used prescription stimulants in their lifetime (McCabe et al. 98).

The most widely used motivations for illicitly using prescription stimulants are to get more energy, delay the need of sleep, improve concentration, and enhance alertness in succeeding order according to Prevalence and Motives for Illicit Use of Prescription Stimulants in an Undergraduate Student Sample.  In a study at the University of Michigan, 69% of non-medical users of stimulants reported using stimulants to get more energy, 61% used prescription stimulants to stay awake, 58% used the drugs to help them concentrate, and 43% used the drugs to increase their alertness (Teter et al. 256 and 260).  In this study, it was also found that some other motives for illicitly using prescription stimulants outside of the academic realm are for experimental purposes, to feel good and get high, and to lose weight.  These purposes are measured at up to 43%, but are still not as significant as motives involving the enhancement of academic performance.

In the college environment, there are some student characteristics and university characteristics in which illicit use of prescription stimulants is more prevalent.  Students under the age of 23 are more likely to be illicit prescription stimulant users.  Males tend to use more than females by about 3%.  The white population illicitly uses more than any other race.  Individuals that are in a Greek organization illicitly use almost 5% more than non-members.  Individuals in a higher socio-economic status are also more likely to illicitly use prescription stimulants (McCabe et al. 99 and 103).  Being “more perfectionistic is associated with greater use as well” (Low 283).  Universities that have more competitive admissions criteria show a higher use of illicit prescription stimulants among their students.  Students that attend small, competitive colleges tend to be “more willing to experiment with amphetamines to enhance academic performance” (Low 286).  Universities in the Northeast region of the United States showed the highest percentage of student illicit use of prescription stimulants.  All of the characteristics in this paragraph play a role in the likelihood of college students to illicitly use prescription stimulants.                    

Another factor that may have a take part in the likelihood of illicit use of prescription stimulants is the amount of prescription stimulants available to young adult students.  It is widely believed that ADHD is over diagnosed and prescription stimulants are overprescribed.  Ritalin prescriptions in the “United States increased by 260% between 1990 and 1995” (Babcock and Byrne 143).  In association with Ritalin, “11 million prescriptions are written for this drug every year, and more adolescents have used the substance illegally than are taking it as a result of a doctor’s prescription” (Mosher and Akins 83). In a national survey, it was found that “of the undergraduate students who were medically prescribed stimulant medication for ADHD, approximately 54% had been approached to divert their medication.  Over 90% of non-medical users of prescription stimulants who reported a source indicated they obtained prescription stimulants from peers and friends” (McCabe et al. 103-104).  It is far too easy to get a prescription stimulant from a doctor or illicitly obtain it from an individual, especially in a college environment.  Prescription stimulants are easily accessible and readily given, allowing them to be illicitly used and abused more frequently.

The illicit use of prescription stimulants to enhance academic performance is a concern to our society.  For many young adults, illicit prescription abuse instigates additional illegal and risky behaviors.  Marijuana use was ten times more likely, binge drinking was almost seven times more likely, cocaine use was over 20 times more likely, and incidents of drinking and driving were five times more likely for young adult students who illicitly used prescription stimulants in the past year (McCabe et al. 102).  Once an individual has cheated in a class and gotten away with it once, it becomes easier to cheat the second time knowing that they got away with it previously.  In the same mindset, young adult users may view no harm or risk in experimenting with other drugs and dangerous behavior if they are already illicitly using prescription stimulants.  This mindset brings an experimental and less honorable culture to young adult students. 

In Drugs and Drug Policy, a senior in high school named Costello said, “Nothing bad comes from it, only good” (Mosher and Akins 175).  Costello takes several pills of Ritalin a day, and has developed some problems sleeping.    Students like Costello are putting their health in jeopardy in effort to reach exceptionally high standards of performance.  Costello said that nothing bad came from using prescription stimulants, but he had already accepted and overlooked his sleeping problems. For the most part, users only see the positive effects and results of the drugs they are ingesting.  There is nothing bad happening to them, so why not experiment with other drugs too? 

Just like cheating on a test, taking drugs to enhance academic performance is not the honorable way to succeed; even though, it gets users the results they want.  It may be on a smaller scale than heroin use, but illegal prescription stimulant use is still unethical and dishonorable.  Society needs to recognize and accentuate the degradation of integrity associated with illicitly taking prescription stimulants, or young adult students will probably continue to see no problem in taking them. 

In weighing their options between studying the natural way or using prescription stimulants, there is an increase in students reaching for academic success using the latter.  If students do not know the effects these drugs could have on them and the impact consuming the drugs has on their integrity, they think, “why not use a drug that will aid me to do better?”  Society needs to inform young adult students of the detrimental effects and degradation of integrity associated with illicit prescription stimulant abuse, so that young adult students no longer see drugs like Ritalin and Adderall as harmless and innocent.    


 

Works Cited

Babcock, Quinton, and Tom Byrne. “Student Perceptions of Methylphenidate Abuse at a Public Liberal Arts College.” Journal of American College Health 49.3 (Nov. 2000): 143. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Torreyson Library, Conway, AR. 15 Oct. 2008 http://0-search.ebscohost.com.ucark.uca.edu/login.aspx?direct=true&db=aph&AN=3918728&site=ehost-live.

 

Levinthal, Charles F. Drugs, Behavior, and Modern Society. 5th ed. Boston:  Pearson Education, 2008.

Low, KG, and AE Gendaszek. “Illicit use of psychostimulants among college students: a preliminary study.” Psychology, Health & Medicine 7.3 (Aug. 2002): 283-287. CINAHL. EBSCO. Torreyson Library, Conway, AR. 6 Oct. 2008 http://0-search.ebscohost.com.ucark.uca.edu/login.aspx?direct=true&db=cin20&AN=2009449017&site=ehost-live.

 

McCabe, SE, et al. “Non-medical use of prescription stimulants among US college students: prevalence and correlates from a national survey [corrected] [published erratum appears in ADDICTION 2005 Apr;100(4):573].” Addiction 100.1 (2005): 96-106. CINAHL. EBSCO. Torreyson Library, Conway, AR. 6 Oct. 2008 http://0-search.ebscohost.com.ucark.uca.edu/login.aspx?direct=true&db=cin20&AN=2005060253&site=ehost-live.

 

Mosher, Clayton J. and Scott Akins.  Drugs and Drug Policy:  The Control of Consciousness Alteration.  Thousand Oaks:  Sage Publications, 2007.

Teter, CJ, et al. “Prevalence and motives for illicit use of prescription stimulants in an undergraduate student sample.” Journal of American College Health 53.6 (May 2005): 253-262. CINAHL. EBSCO. Torreyson Library, Conway, AR. 6 Oct. 2008 http://0-search.ebscohost.com.ucark.uca.edu/login.aspx?direct=true&db=cin20&AN=2009047473&site=ehost-live.

 

 

Leave a Comment

Mood and Behavior Modication Drugs

Drugs that are used to alter mood and behavior were not as widely accepted three decades ago as they are today.  There was a common attitude that drugs used to alter mood and behavior were “only for the mentally ill.”  Now, it is common for everyday people to take drugs to alter their mood in behavior.  This group of drugs has become safer and more convenient to use since three decades ago.  Many people with mental disorders such as depression, anxiety, autism, and bipolar disorder use these drugs to lead a life as close to normal as possible.  Since deinstitutionalization in the 1960s, people with less severe mental disorders can lead normal lives by taking medications every day instead of being locked in a mental hospital.  Currently, more people put their pride aside and come forward with their mental disorders and reach out for help.  A few decades ago, it was not as accepted to admit to having a mental disorder.  More people realize the prevalence of mental disorders in our society now.  1 in 6 people will experience depression in their lifetime, so obviously, it is not just the “mentally ill” that need drugs to alter their mood and behavior.  Mental disorders can happen to anyone, not just crazy people.

The use of sleep aid medications is also rising exponentially in America.  I think more Americans are turning to these medications, because we experience more stress, anxiety, and worry as time progresses.  America as a whole has the want to be the best, always.  We compromise anything to achieve this goal.  We will work 100 hours a week and not sleep for 36 hours if that is what it takes.  We stress ourselves and put ourselves in bad health.  Many people cannot sleep at night, because they have too much still going on in their mind.  They are thinking of what they should be doing instead of sleeping and what they have to do the following day.  We do not value down time and rest as much as we value accomplishments.  We do not win a social prize for taking a day off to read a book.  Some Americans are taking sleeping aids on a need-based situation, because they cannot sleep naturally.  But I feel that the reason they need sleep aids is on a want-based situation.  Americans do not have to be so busy and strung out.  It is the choice of the individual to be stressed out of their mind, or lead a more relaxed lifestyle.

I have never had any personal experiences with anyone that had to take medications for anxiety, panic, or sleep aid.  I think that there are people that need medications for mental disorders, but the amount of people that are currently taking these medications is high.  Medication is not the only option for treatment.  I think that it is important to try therapy first, and if that does not work alone, begin treatment with medication alongside therapy.

Using anti-psychotic drugs and other medications on those with diagnosed psychiatric disorders against their will is necessary to medicate anyone who has a mental disorder and is unable to think rationally or take care of themselves.  Doctors are going to do what is best for the patient.  Some people with mental disorders are not in a rational mindset, and do not know what is best for them.  It is a sad and upsetting situation, but something has to be done to help them.  They do not know how to help themselves, so it is the duty of the people who love them to ensure that they are treated and hopefully get better.

Leave a Comment

Hallucinogens

Hallucinogens are a class of drugs that produce distortions in perception and body image at moderate doses.  The major categories of hallucinogens are hallucinogens related to serotonin, hallucinogens related to norepinephrine, hallucinogens related to acetylcholine, and miscellaneous hallucinogens.  Hallucinogens related to serotonin include lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), psilocybin, lysergic acid amide, dimethyltryptamine, and harmine.  Hallucinogens related to norepinephrine include mescaline, DOM or STP, and MDMA (Ecstasy).  Hallucinogens related to acetylcholine include atropine, scopolamine, hyoscyamine, and ibotenic acid.  Miscellaneous hallucinogens include phencyclidine (PCP) and ketamine.

In Food of the Gods, McKenna makes a claim that the homo sapien brain evolved due to the ingestion of hallucinogens.  He says that we are more complex due to our consciousness and emotions that originated from hallucinogens.  McKenna’s case for the evolution of the homo sapien brain is interesting, but does not seem likely to me.  Humans are not the only species that ingest hallucinogens.  Hallucinogenic mushrooms for example are on the ground and can easily be eaten by cattle, but cattle do not show the brain development we have.

I believe that taking drugs can change the way you see the world.  Taking drugs alters the chemicals in your brain and the concentration of these chemicals, so this obviously changes your emotions, perceptions, and consciousness.  Many hallucinogen users claim that your senses are immediately sharper when using.  Some people even say that you can see sounds and taste colors.  I have no personal experience, but a few friends of mine have said that they have had revelations when using hallucinogens.  They said things are seen in a different mind set, and everything seems to slow down, so they notice everything about their environment.

Hallucinogenic drug use in the 1960s, especially LSD use, inspired the hippie culture which promotes peace, love, and happiness.  This makes sense, because when using LSD and marijuana, the user’s consciousness is more aware of its surroundings.  It seems that users tend to be more appreciative and passionate about everything be it a tree or a box of cereal.  The hippie culture promotes close, accepting, and loving relationships.  There seems to be no harm in that.

Leave a Comment