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The teen years are often a time to explore and learn more about themselves as they approach adulthood. Often, this involves experimenting and testing their boundaries. The desire to do something new or risky is a normal part of teen development.
Teens who perceive little risk in using drugs are more likely to use drugs. Teens may also use drugs or alcohol to:
Many factors influence a child’s likelihood to use illegal substances or develop a substance abuse disorder. Effective drug prevention focuses on reducing the risk factors and strengthening the protective factors that are most closely related to substance abuse.
Risk factors are circumstances or events that increase a child’s use and abuse of drugs. The more risk factors present, the more likely a child may be to use drugs and develop problems. Risk factors for drug use include:
Protective factors are those characteristics that can reduce a person's risk for substance abuse or addiction. Protective factors that may decrease the risk of drug use include:
As a parent you can control many of the risk and protective factors in your home. Remember that parents and caregivers are the most important role models in children’s lives. For more information see Growing up Drug Free: A Parent’s Guide to Prevention.
Source: O’Connell, M.E., Boat, T., & Warner, K.E. (Eds.). (2009) Preventing mental, emotional, and behavioral disorders among young people: Progress and possibilities. National Research Council and Institute of Medicine of the National Academies. Washington, D.C.: The National Academies Press.
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Whether due to a sport injury, getting wisdom teeth pulled, or just a freak accident, there are many reasons why doctors may prescribe opioid painkillers to teens.
Many of us have told our loved ones to watch out for spiked drinks at parties. But do you also need to warn your teens about drugs in their food?
Young people are getting drugs online, perhaps now more than ever.
The teen years are often a time to explore and learn more about themselves as they approach adulthood. Often, this involves experimenting and testing their boundaries. The desire to do something new or risky is a normal part of teen development.
This is a United States Government, Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) website.
The inclusion of a link on this website does not constitute an official endorsement, guarantee, or approval by DEA.

Mexican police recover bodies on the outskirts of Juarez, victims of a bloody drug gang war. Picture: APSource:Supplied
TERROR is clearly visible in the boy’s eyes as he lies on his back, gagged and bound, on the dirt somewhere in Venezuela.
It is night and the shirtless boy dressed in a pair of blue jeans and a black belt has his hands tied behind his bag and a length of light green cloth binds his mouth.
The boy is smooth-skinned with an undeveloped chest. He could be as young as 13.
A man’s voice speaking in Spanish can be heard as the boy’s terrified face fills the camera lens.
The man is saying something about a house, money and the command of the Venezuelan nationality worldwide.
The man has a machete-style knife and moves into the picture to slice off the boy’s ears.
It is virtually impossible to watch the rest of the video, but it has been described to news.com.au as an execution by a drug cartel.
Brutal and merciless, the video is nevertheless deliberate and has been supplied to news.com.au along with another video of a drug execution in Mexico.
This is too cruel and bloody to watch, but the message is the same.
The drug cartels of Venezuela and Mexico kidnap their rivals, torture them, execute them and record their actions as a warning.
Gagged, bound and terrified the teenage boy lies on his back in the dirt somewhere in Venezuela before his execution with a machete.Source:Supplied
The assailant slices off the boy’s ears.Source:Supplied
The terrified boy lies back.Source:Supplied
Mexican and Venezuelan drug cartels kidnap, torture and execute rivals and record their actions as a warning.Source:Supplied
The boy killed with a machete is probably the victim of one of Venezuela’s “megabandas”, or gangs born out of the overcrowded, unregulated prison system.
One of the most violent prison systems in the world, with almost 6500 murders committed in custody between 1999 and 2014, the jails ballooned in population, more than trebling in that time.
The megabandas govern large swathes of the country, carrying out drug trafficking, kidnapping and extortion.
They operate alongside the Venezuelan cocaine syndicate, the Cartel of the Suns, which smuggles the drug from Colombia to the US via the impoverished state of Apure.
From poor border towns along the rivers across stretches of prairie, megabandas are now the de facto law.
Pink crosses mark the desert graves of young women murdered in the border town of Juarez, Mexico.Source:News Limited
Mexican army raids a house in 2012 owned by one of the country’s four major cocaine syndicates, the Gulf Cartel.Source:Supplied
The burnt out car of the West Australian surfers murdered in Sinaloa, Mexico in 2015.Source:AFP
Both brutal videos were sent by a South American friend via Whatsapp to Australian journalist Paul Corcoran and his wife.
The couple have been travelling around South America for 13 months.
“I was only able to watch the first couple of seconds of the video as they are truly horrific,” Mr Corcoran told news.com.au.
“I think for a couple of minutes about ‘Cocaine Cassie’ in Colombia.
“I don’t know if she knew what she was doing or she was clueless.
“After watching only a couple of seconds of the video you can understand why drug mules don’t talk about the kingpins of the drug cartels.”
Weapons seized in a 2011 riot in Venezuelan Rodeo prison. Picture: El UniversalSource:Supplied
Australian tourists Adam Coleman and Dean Lucas in the van in which they were ambushed, shot and their vehicle torched in Sinaloa state, Mexico in 2015.Source:Supplied
Venezuelan megabandas rose out of the squalid prisons like Rodeo Jail (above) where “pranes” (gang leaders) rule the most violent in the world. Picture: Reportero 24Source:Supplied
In Mexico, four different drug cartels rule, including the notoriously sinister Sinaloa.
Just over two years ago, two West Australian surfers vanished in November 2015 while driving through Mexico.
The charred bodies of Adam Coleman and Dean Lucas, both 33, were found in their burnt out van on a gang-plagued rural road in Sinaloa state.
According to state prosecutors, the van was intercepted by a gang driving a car that flashed police-like lights.
Both men were shot and their vehicle set on fire.
Drug kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, a fugitive at the time of the Australians’ murder but now back in custody, led the Sinaloa drug cartel.
South Australian drug mule Cassandra Sainsbury handcuffed and posing with the cocaine packages from her suitcase. Picture: Colombian National PoliceSource:AP
Aircraft activity of drug trafficking suspects shows multiple drug flights from Venezuela in 2010. Picture: United States Southern CommandSource:Supplied
Venezuelan National Guard soldiers by a crater exploded into a clandestine drug airstrip in Apure. Picture: Leo RamirezSource:AFP
Biles pulls out of team event to focus on mental health
The cartels of Tijuana, Juarez and the Gulf have been responsible for the deaths of tens of thousands of Mexicans. In a decade of drug violence, about 26,000 have gone missing.
Last year, periodistadigital.com reported that Mexico was experiencing one of its worst moments in the field of drug trafficking, with authorities unable to keep up.
Mexican drug cartels, if viewed as a combined entity, control most of the cocaine entering the US via a number of trafficking routes.
A report last November by insightcrime.org, an analysis group of Latin American organised crime, described Venezuela as “a key transit country” for drug shipments to the US and Europe.
The New York Times has reported previously that drug traffickers can “make an airstrip on the flat prairie in a few hours by dragging a log behind a pick-up truck to smooth the ground”.
Insight Crime described the shared border as “a hub of criminal activity” for drugs, human trafficking and money laundering.
“Its long Caribbean coastline, sparsely populated jungles and plains and proximity to other Caribbean drug transit points like Puerto Rico, Trinidad and Tobago, Honduras and the Dominican Republic have also contributed to Venezuela becoming a major narcotics smuggling route,” Insight Crime reported.
Mexico’s four drug cartels kidnap and execute victims and video the brutal murders to create fear.Source:Supplied
Notorious Colombian drug trafficker Daniel ‘El Loco’ Barrera arrested in San Cristobal, Venezuela in 2012. Picture: AFPSource:AFP
Elaborate two-storey tombs in Sinaloa, Mexico of the cartel’s drug barons. Picture: Alfredo EstrellaSource:AFP
In the mid-2000s, drug syndicate Cartel of the Suns was formed, allegedly headed up by corrupt elements of the Venezuelan military. The cartel and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) have turned the poor Venezuelan state of Apure into one of the world’s busiest transit hubs for the movement of cocaine to the US.
Border towns along the Meta River, which shares part of the 2200km Colombian-Venezuelan border, are caught up in the trade.
In 2013, three men from the Venezuelan National Guard were arrested for placing 31 suitcases containing 1.3 tons of cocaine on a flight from the capital Caracas to Paris.
In 2014, a commander for the Guard was stopped while driving to Valencia, Venezuela with his family with 554kg of cocaine in the vehicle.
US Homeland Security images of people arrested for trafficking drugs from Mexico to Arizona in 2011.Source:Supplied
A relative cries outside prison in Barquisimeto, Venezuela where inmates die of drug overdoses in the crowded jail. Picture: Dedwison Alvarez.Source:AP
In 2015, the two nephews of Venezuelas’s President Nicolas Maduro’s wife were arrested in Haiti in a sting by the US Drug Enforcement Agency.
The men were negotiating the transport of 800kg of cocaine to New York.
Following his 2013 election, President Maduro’s government created a special homicide police unit and the deployment of the armed forces to fight crime.
But it remains an uphill battle, with criminal organisations from Colombia, Brazil and Europe as well as homegrown groups all operating in Venezuela.
Last September, Insight Crime reported that the power of megabanda prison gang leaders, known as “pranes”, has risen with these bosses overseeing a food and clothing network in the squalid jails.
This has expanded to alcohol, drugs, and prostitutes.
A system of extortion governed whether an inmate had a comfortable cell and access to supplies for visits and parties.
When inmates were released from prison, they would join the megabanda roaming the country and engaging in criminal activities.
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