According to data from the New Jersey Attorney General’s Office, there were 2,564 suspected drug-related deaths in New Jersey last year.
“Most of those individuals that have unfortunately lost their lives to an overdose, there is fentanyl that can be traced as part of the illicit drugs they might have been experimenting [with] or using,” Valente said.“We hear so many stories from parents about the fact that their children were just experimenting for the first time, exposed to fentanyl and unfortunately were involved in an overdose situation.”
Angelica Mercado, a youth coordinator for the Camden County Council on Alcoholism and Drug Abuse, Inc., said her organization is working with several schools this week, including the Voorhees Middle School, and counselors are talking to students about leadership, making good decisions and learning to say no.
“They’re being exposed to so many different substances, whether it’s vaping, marijuana, underage drinking,” she said. “The dangers associated with that is really not knowing the chemicals that are in it, the dangers that are in it.”
She said kids 12 and 13 years old are living in a world where sometimes they are offered harmful drugs.
“They think it’s something that, if their peers are doing it, it’s safe,” she said. “They don’t see the radical risk or the radical dangers.”
Mercado said middle schoolers are being given a very clear message about drugs: to stay away from them and to not get swayed by misinformation on social media.
“You don’t know what’s in there, you don’t know where they got it from, you don’t know any of these risks and how it can affect you specifically as an individual, ” she said. “We have to get out of that mindset of what we see as normal and OK, and understand that opinion is not fact, that’s something that I really drive home to them when we’re talking about substances.”