The DEA and Discovery Education’s Efforts to Prevent its Growth by Robin Porter
Pharmaceutical opioids are commonly prescribed due to their ability to relieve pain efficiently. Opioids work by binding to specific proteins called opioid receptors that exist in the brain, spinal cord, and gastrointestinal tract. After attaching to them, the opioid triggers an excess flow of certain neurotransmitters, including dopamine, a type of chemical signal that makes people feel good. When used safely, prescription opioids have the strength to alleviate some of the most severe and chronic pain. When misused, however, serious health risks – including addiction, overdose and death – may occur.
Heroin and fentanyl are two opioids that are playing a large role in the epidemic and the fatalities it is causing. Both are very potent, rapidly-acting, and can have dangerous effects on the body in just one dose. Like other opioids, heroin and fentanyl reduce pain sensations and increase pleasure and relaxation by binding to opioid receptors in the brain. However, heroin is an illegal substance with no accepted medicinal use in the United States and fentanyl is a synthetic opioid that is 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine. While pharmaceutical fentanyl does have approved medicinal uses, the DEA classifies it as a Schedule II controlled substance, indicating that it has a very high potential for abuse and addiction. However, fentanyl and fentanyl variations are often produced illicitly for use as cutting agents or fillers in heroin. These illegal fentanyls are cheap, relatively easy to obtain, and dramatically increase the potency of heroin. Given fentanyl’s lethality, it has led many unsuspecting drug users to overdose because it is often passed off as pure heroin.
To take action against the opioid epidemic and disrupt its further advancement, federal agencies are also working to inform patients, parents, teens, pharmacists and educators about the dangers of opioid misuse. At Discovery Education, we joined forces with the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to create Operation Prevention.
Launched in 2016, Operation Prevention provides educators, students and families with standards-aligned resources including digital lesson plans, interdisciplinary activities, a family toolkit, and an interactive e-learning module called “The Science of Addiction: The Stories of Teens.” It has also hosted two Virtual Field Trips to allow students to virtually meet neuroscientists, DEA agents, drug prevention experts, those in recovery, and community members that have been impacted by the opioid epidemic. All resources are free of cost, require no local sponsorship or corporate funding, and are designed to help students make informed decisions about the misuse of prescription opioids, and to kick-start honest dialogue about substance abuse disorder in homes and classrooms across the country.
More information on Operation Prevention and access to the program’s free resources for students, educators, parents and communities are available at operationprevention.com.
Author
Following her work at USA Today, she served as an education consultant for Fortune 500 companies, education associations, sports teams, and museums and for whom she developed more than 150 education programs for K-12 students, educators and parents.
Robin currently leads the development of print and digital content and curriculum for Discovery Education’s corporate and association partnerships programs.
Follow Robin Porter on Twitter
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