STORY BYIt's called lean, barre, purple stuff, syrup and it is oozing everywhere.
Take a hip-hop song, slow it down to a distorted crawl, pour prescription cough syrup into a styrofoam cup and plop a couple of Jolly Rancher candies into the mix and you have the latest drug craze and cultural trend sweeping through our middle and high schools.
And Houston, Texas has the dubious distinction of being both the birthplace and the epicenter of this new drug subculture.
Though prior research is woefully thin on this drug trend, estimates indicate that 25 percent of at-risk Houston youth have reported recreational use of codeine syrup, with 10 percent reporting that they used it within 30 days of being asked about it, according to a study published by Peters and colleagues in the Journal of Psychoactive Drugs 35(2), 2003.
Findings show that of the admitted users interviewed, 81 percent were male, 54 percent were African American, 33 percent were Hispanic American and 13 percent were White American. Anecdotally, though, use among American college students is widespread and seems to have become a youth-culture craze, crossing all race and economic boundaries.
"Parents need to know that this is something that has become normal and is considered to be normal among children of all races," says Ron Peters, Dr.PH., lead author of the study and assistant professor of behavioral sciences at the UT School of Public Health.
"And we know that this phenomenon is seriously under-reported," Peters says.
But it isn't just the drug-it's the music known as "Screw" that drives this beat. "This drug and its use is heavily reinforced and induced by the Houston music that gave birth to it," Peters explains.
Peters and his fellow researchers have been exploring and documenting the illegal use of prescription cough syrups that contain codeine and promethazine and examining the entire culture that is built around Houston teens' use.
More importantly, he and his team have researched the perceived addiction rate of "lean" and the news is not good. Most kids believe that they are addicted to it from the first exposure. They also perceive the peer pressure to use it to be so strong that they have no chance of stopping.
"It's considered on the streets to be 'player potion,' " Peters says. "If you're not drinking syrup, then you're not a 'player.' "
Codeine is a naturally-occurring narcotic, derived from opium that is used for pain management and, in this case, cough suppression. Promethazine is a versatile drug that, in this case is used as a powerful antihistamine with sedative properties.
His research was published in last month's Journal of Drug Education, entitled "Beliefs and Social Norms about Codeine and Promethazine Hydrochloride Cough Syrup Onset and Perceived Addiction Among Urban Houstonian Adolescents: An Addiction Trend in the City of Lean."
The widespread abuse of codeine/promethazine cough syrup (CPHS) "has evolved as a result of lyrics in a popular and innovative form of hip-hop music in the Houston-based underground music scene called 'Screw,'" Peters explains.
DJ Screw, a hip-hop Houston rapper created an off-shoot of the inner-city rap music medium with the distinguishing feature of a markedly slowed beat, "like a 45 rpm record played at 33 and a third," Peters explains. "One of the first major songs written by [another Houston rapper] Big Mo was called 'Barre Baby' alluding to the pharmaceutical distributor, Barre."
Another song on the Billboard Top 10 was "Sippin' on Some Syrup" by 3-6 Mafia and Houston group UGK (Underground Kings).
Peters says that this subculture has proliferated through the rest of the United States and Canada. Codeine "purple stuff" use is growing and, Peters says is being recklessly encouraged by Screw--now a multi-platinum coup for the recording industry. "It's on radio, in video and on CD."
The combination of the distortedly slow music, the sedative effects of the drug and the anecdotal support of young users that it is indeed "cool" to do "lean" has the Texas Commission on Alcohol and Drug Abuse (TCADA) highly concerned, says Peters' report.
Kids purchase varying quantities of the syrup from street dealers, mix it with a soft drink-usually Sprite-add hard candy for flavor and consume it as a recreational drug.
The combination of these two drugs, when used recreationally prolongs the "high" and the sedative effects of both drugs.
The study showed both male and female students named "media modeling" as the foremost reason for the popularity of syrup usage, but males also acknowledged "euphoric effects," "peer pressure," and "accessibility" as additional reasons for the popularity of the drug.
Researchers also examined the perceived addiction rate of syrup and found that most kids believed they were addicted to it the first time they used the trend drug.
The illegal and recreational use of cough syrup is nothing new. Illegal prescription drug use and addiction in general is on the rise and is rampant. " What we have here is an underground culture that is now hitting mainstream rap, through radio, CD and video. It is infiltrating other states at an alarming rate and has now diffused to Canada," Peters says.
Kids procure the syrup in two-ounce bottles for about $30. A pint can cost $250 to $300 on the street.
Street dealers acquire the syrup in several ways, from unscrupulous pharmacists or doctors, through theft at the manufacturing or distributor level, or from well-meaning physicians who truly are trying to quell a cough.
"A cough is something that can easily be faked. Sometimes even the parents are obtaining prescriptions for their children and selling it to make a little money on the side. It is a huge problem," Peters says.
Dr. Ronald Peters is an assistant professor of behavioral sciences at the UT School of Public Health.
See Dr. Peters also at:
Packing Bag Lunches Safely
If you pack lunches for your child to take to school, be careful that you do not accidentally expose them to foodborne illness.
Bagged lunches, especially those containing perishable foods, need to be packed and handled properly in order to keep the food safe. In general, perishable foods should not be left at room temperature for more than two hours. If left out too long, the temperature of the food can enter the danger zone where bacteria grow most rapidly, which is between 40 and 140 degrees Fahrenheit.
Below are some tips to help families pack bagged lunches safely:
Before eating lunch or snacks at school, make sure your child washes his or her hands with soap and warm water for at least 20 seconds. If your child's school does not have a handwashing program in place, encourage them to adopt a such a program, as handwashing is one of the best ways kids and parents can protect health and stop the spread of germs.