Explaining intravenous drug abuse to a small childWhat is an appropriate age to talk to you child about alcohol?How much of my prior drug use should I disclose to my tween daughter?My 15-year-old daughter is having sex with her boyfriend who is a drug dealerMy 13 yo son has drug and alcohol issues. What should I do?Health risk to my unborn child due to alcohol and drug use before finding out I was pregnant?What to do with an adult child with a mental illness and drug taking
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Explaining intravenous drug abuse to a small child
What is an appropriate age to talk to you child about alcohol?How much of my prior drug use should I disclose to my tween daughter?My 15-year-old daughter is having sex with her boyfriend who is a drug dealerMy 13 yo son has drug and alcohol issues. What should I do?Health risk to my unborn child due to alcohol and drug use before finding out I was pregnant?What to do with an adult child with a mental illness and drug taking
Drugs are bad, m'kay.
In the area where I live, one of the unfortunate facts of life is widespread drug abuse. So, at night junkies use local playgrounds to shoot up then leave syringes and needles lying around, which is obviously dangerous for kids using the playground during the day. Today, we found a needle at the top of a slide and four syringes a few feet away.
I've already explained about the need for wearing shoes at all times. I've also explained that neither needles nor syringes must be touched because they carry infection. That went across very well when I added that should an accident with a needle occur then a visit to the hospital will be mandatory and most likely involve several injections (show me a kid who isn't scared of injections!).
What I couldn't explain was why the syringes and needles were there. My child thought they were used by doctors or nurses but was puzzled why doctors or nurses would use such things at playgrounds and leave them lying around.
I almost went ahead and explained intravenous drug use wanting to stress the deleterious effects of drugs but stopped myself as didn't want to plant the idea of drugs or drug use in a small child.
Now comes the hard part. How would you explain intravenous drug use to a 6yo?
drugs
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add a comment |
Drugs are bad, m'kay.
In the area where I live, one of the unfortunate facts of life is widespread drug abuse. So, at night junkies use local playgrounds to shoot up then leave syringes and needles lying around, which is obviously dangerous for kids using the playground during the day. Today, we found a needle at the top of a slide and four syringes a few feet away.
I've already explained about the need for wearing shoes at all times. I've also explained that neither needles nor syringes must be touched because they carry infection. That went across very well when I added that should an accident with a needle occur then a visit to the hospital will be mandatory and most likely involve several injections (show me a kid who isn't scared of injections!).
What I couldn't explain was why the syringes and needles were there. My child thought they were used by doctors or nurses but was puzzled why doctors or nurses would use such things at playgrounds and leave them lying around.
I almost went ahead and explained intravenous drug use wanting to stress the deleterious effects of drugs but stopped myself as didn't want to plant the idea of drugs or drug use in a small child.
Now comes the hard part. How would you explain intravenous drug use to a 6yo?
drugs
New contributor
add a comment |
Drugs are bad, m'kay.
In the area where I live, one of the unfortunate facts of life is widespread drug abuse. So, at night junkies use local playgrounds to shoot up then leave syringes and needles lying around, which is obviously dangerous for kids using the playground during the day. Today, we found a needle at the top of a slide and four syringes a few feet away.
I've already explained about the need for wearing shoes at all times. I've also explained that neither needles nor syringes must be touched because they carry infection. That went across very well when I added that should an accident with a needle occur then a visit to the hospital will be mandatory and most likely involve several injections (show me a kid who isn't scared of injections!).
What I couldn't explain was why the syringes and needles were there. My child thought they were used by doctors or nurses but was puzzled why doctors or nurses would use such things at playgrounds and leave them lying around.
I almost went ahead and explained intravenous drug use wanting to stress the deleterious effects of drugs but stopped myself as didn't want to plant the idea of drugs or drug use in a small child.
Now comes the hard part. How would you explain intravenous drug use to a 6yo?
drugs
New contributor
Drugs are bad, m'kay.
In the area where I live, one of the unfortunate facts of life is widespread drug abuse. So, at night junkies use local playgrounds to shoot up then leave syringes and needles lying around, which is obviously dangerous for kids using the playground during the day. Today, we found a needle at the top of a slide and four syringes a few feet away.
I've already explained about the need for wearing shoes at all times. I've also explained that neither needles nor syringes must be touched because they carry infection. That went across very well when I added that should an accident with a needle occur then a visit to the hospital will be mandatory and most likely involve several injections (show me a kid who isn't scared of injections!).
What I couldn't explain was why the syringes and needles were there. My child thought they were used by doctors or nurses but was puzzled why doctors or nurses would use such things at playgrounds and leave them lying around.
I almost went ahead and explained intravenous drug use wanting to stress the deleterious effects of drugs but stopped myself as didn't want to plant the idea of drugs or drug use in a small child.
Now comes the hard part. How would you explain intravenous drug use to a 6yo?
drugs
drugs
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked 5 hours ago
RuutsaRuutsa
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Just be truthful. While the details about chemical addiction may fly over a 6 year old's head, the general idea is really not that hard to understand. Tell them that drugs are chemicals that can make people feel really good, but that are very unhealthy. Fundamentally, it's like candy and sweets, but far more dangerous (the consequences are more than obesity and tooth decay). This is something a child can easily relate to without making it appear alluring (who would want poisoned candy, anyway?).
add a comment |
You could try to leverage the knowledge your child already has about who normally uses syringes ("doctors or nurses"). Suggest that there are some people, who aren't doctors or nurses, who use medicine in ways they aren't supposed to. If you get a followup question like "why do they do that?", then maybe say those people might be sick and they really need to go see a real doctor.
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2 Answers
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Just be truthful. While the details about chemical addiction may fly over a 6 year old's head, the general idea is really not that hard to understand. Tell them that drugs are chemicals that can make people feel really good, but that are very unhealthy. Fundamentally, it's like candy and sweets, but far more dangerous (the consequences are more than obesity and tooth decay). This is something a child can easily relate to without making it appear alluring (who would want poisoned candy, anyway?).
add a comment |
Just be truthful. While the details about chemical addiction may fly over a 6 year old's head, the general idea is really not that hard to understand. Tell them that drugs are chemicals that can make people feel really good, but that are very unhealthy. Fundamentally, it's like candy and sweets, but far more dangerous (the consequences are more than obesity and tooth decay). This is something a child can easily relate to without making it appear alluring (who would want poisoned candy, anyway?).
add a comment |
Just be truthful. While the details about chemical addiction may fly over a 6 year old's head, the general idea is really not that hard to understand. Tell them that drugs are chemicals that can make people feel really good, but that are very unhealthy. Fundamentally, it's like candy and sweets, but far more dangerous (the consequences are more than obesity and tooth decay). This is something a child can easily relate to without making it appear alluring (who would want poisoned candy, anyway?).
Just be truthful. While the details about chemical addiction may fly over a 6 year old's head, the general idea is really not that hard to understand. Tell them that drugs are chemicals that can make people feel really good, but that are very unhealthy. Fundamentally, it's like candy and sweets, but far more dangerous (the consequences are more than obesity and tooth decay). This is something a child can easily relate to without making it appear alluring (who would want poisoned candy, anyway?).
answered 3 hours ago
forestforest
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You could try to leverage the knowledge your child already has about who normally uses syringes ("doctors or nurses"). Suggest that there are some people, who aren't doctors or nurses, who use medicine in ways they aren't supposed to. If you get a followup question like "why do they do that?", then maybe say those people might be sick and they really need to go see a real doctor.
add a comment |
You could try to leverage the knowledge your child already has about who normally uses syringes ("doctors or nurses"). Suggest that there are some people, who aren't doctors or nurses, who use medicine in ways they aren't supposed to. If you get a followup question like "why do they do that?", then maybe say those people might be sick and they really need to go see a real doctor.
add a comment |
You could try to leverage the knowledge your child already has about who normally uses syringes ("doctors or nurses"). Suggest that there are some people, who aren't doctors or nurses, who use medicine in ways they aren't supposed to. If you get a followup question like "why do they do that?", then maybe say those people might be sick and they really need to go see a real doctor.
You could try to leverage the knowledge your child already has about who normally uses syringes ("doctors or nurses"). Suggest that there are some people, who aren't doctors or nurses, who use medicine in ways they aren't supposed to. If you get a followup question like "why do they do that?", then maybe say those people might be sick and they really need to go see a real doctor.
answered 2 hours ago
Greg HewgillGreg Hewgill
1,308613
1,308613
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add a comment |
Ruutsa is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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