School of Pharmacy students and faculty deliver presentation on opioids at Windham Middle School
Students and faculty from the School of Pharmacy recently delivered a presentation on the opioid epidemic to 120 seventh grade students at Windham Middle School.
The presentation was part of the school鈥檚 on-going project 鈥淭aking Back Maine鈥檚 Future.鈥
鈥淗ere in Maine, we have a significant issue with opioids,鈥 commented Pilar Starkey, Ed.D., Windham Middle School science teacher. 鈥淚f we are able to get these students now to start thinking about solutions, maybe 20 years from now we can solve this. We want them to be learning and focusing on real problems and solving them.鈥
The opioid epidemic continues to claim lives in Maine at an alarming rate. Maine shattered its previous record for overdose deaths last year when 636 Mainers died from overdoses. That鈥檚 an increase of 23%, or 121 people, from the previous year.
UNE鈥檚 School of Pharmacy鈥檚 Stephanie Nichols, Pharm.D., BCPP, BCPS, associate professor and a member of the Governor鈥檚 Opioid Response Clinical Advisory Committee, along with students Julia Busiere (Pharm.D. 鈥22) and Rebekah Guay (Pharm.D. 鈥23), delivered a presentation to students on the dangers of opioid use, the proliferation of high potency opioids, signs of overdose, and stigma reduction.
鈥淚 think they are very impressionable at this age,鈥 Busiere said. 鈥淚t is a pivotal age in development. I think this generation of young people in general is very curious and very smart. So, providing them with this education, I think they will take it and run with it, educating their friends and their family.鈥
Guay was impressed with how attentive the students were.
鈥淚 was really pleased to see how curious they were and that they were asking questions,鈥 she stated. 鈥淎 lot of them had answers to questions that we posed. They just seemed to be interested and involved.鈥
Leaders of 鈥淏e the Influence,鈥 a drug prevention coalition from the Windham and Raymond area, contacted Kris Hall, M.F.A., Program Manager, Center for Excellence in Collaborative Education (CECE), to see if 51小黄车would get involved in the middle school鈥檚 program.
鈥淲e reached out to some students and the pharmacy students were a natural match for this,鈥 Hall explained. 鈥淥ur students are very well trained in their area of expertise and they appreciate the chance to be able to share what they've learned at 51小黄车with others.鈥
Teachers and administrators at Windham Middle School say they are grateful for the time and effort the 51小黄车group put into the presentation.
鈥淥ne of the things the pandemic experience has reinforced is the importance of community connection,鈥 Starkey stated. 鈥淚 appreciate the group showing our students that 51小黄车is part of our community.鈥