Tuesday, January 27, 2026
ADVT 
National

Doctor Warns Parents To Lock Up Medication To Prevent Theft By Teens

The Canadian Press, 12 Oct, 2017 12:42 PM
  • Doctor Warns Parents To Lock Up Medication To Prevent Theft By Teens
VANCOUVER — A doctor who treats chronic substance users says teenagers who steal prescription medication from their family's medicine cabinet may be at risk of becoming addicted to drugs.
 
Dr. William Barakett says parents need to lock up their drugs, return unused medication to a pharmacy and ensure their kids aren't using drugs to mask an emotional disorder.
 
Barakett, an advisory council member for Drug Free Kids Canada, says parents should also take a "good hard look" at whether there's a family history of addiction.
 
He recently testified before a House of Commons committee hearing on marijuana and says many of his patients began smoking pot as kids before taking their family's medication and seeking opioids elsewhere.
 
 
Mike Serr, chairman of the drug advisory committee for the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police, says parents often don't notice when one or two pills are missing, especially if a drug is taken occasionally.
 
Serr, who is deputy chief of the Abbotsford Police Department, says a mother who spoke at a public forum on fentanyl in the Fraser Valley city warned other parents that her son became addicted to opioids after stealing her medication.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. municipalities want campaign finance reform ahead of 2018 local elections

B.C. municipalities want campaign finance reform ahead of 2018 local elections
Municipalities in British Columbia want the provincial government to restrict the role of money in local politics in time for next year's elections.

B.C. municipalities want campaign finance reform ahead of 2018 local elections

Stop the presses? Newspapers snubbed in Liberal government's cultural policy

Stop the presses? Newspapers snubbed in Liberal government's cultural policy
The chair of News Media Canada says the country's struggling newspaper industry is "on its own" thanks to a federal cultural strategy that all but snubs so-called legacy media.

Stop the presses? Newspapers snubbed in Liberal government's cultural policy

Expert on money laundering appointed to review practices in B.C. casinos

Expert on money laundering appointed to review practices in B.C. casinos
An independent expert has been appointed by the B.C. government to conduct a review of the province's policies and practices to prevent money laundering in the gambling industry.

Expert on money laundering appointed to review practices in B.C. casinos

Police probe double homicide after couple found dead in south Vancouver home

Police probe double homicide after couple found dead in south Vancouver home
Vancouver police say they are investigating a double homicide after the bodies of a man and a woman in their 60s were found in a home on Wednesday.

Police probe double homicide after couple found dead in south Vancouver home

Health systems often discriminate against Indigenous patients: Philpott

Health systems often discriminate against Indigenous patients: Philpott
Aboriginal physicians are praising Indigenous Services Minister Jane Philpott for acknowledging discrimination that unfolded at her Toronto-area practice prior to her political life — an issue doctors say is widespread.

Health systems often discriminate against Indigenous patients: Philpott

New citizenship oath to include reference to treaties with Indigenous Peoples

New citizenship oath to include reference to treaties with Indigenous Peoples
A citizenship oath that will require new Canadians to faithfully observe treaties with Indigenous Peoples is nearing completion.The oath has been in development since earlier this year and was road-tested in March during focus groups held by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada.

New citizenship oath to include reference to treaties with Indigenous Peoples