Read the answers and think of the possible questions

Assignment: You may hear information about prescription drugs in the news, online, or from friends. How do you know what’s true? There’s a lot to consider, and many teens have questions. Read on for answers to some frequently asked questions from teens.

Q: ____________________________________?

A: A prescription is a doctor’s written order that authorizes a pharmacist to supply a specific medication for a patient, with instructions on its use. It says who can take the medication, in what amount, and for what length of time. Used exactly according to a doctor’s instructions, prescription drugs are usually safe and effective.

Q: _____________________________________________?

A: A doctor writes a prescription based on a patient’s medical history, symptoms, and other factors. The doctor asks questions such as, “Are you allergic to any medications?” and “Are you currently taking any other medicines?” These questions help the doctor decide which medications to prescribe and which ones not to.

Q: ________________________________________________________?

A: Prescription medications are powerful drugs. Doctors and pharmacists each take several steps to keep prescription medications safe for people who need them. Doctors custom fit a prescription to a patient’s medical history, age, weight, allergies, and other factors. Pharmacists dispense medication and help patients understand instructions for taking them. Oftentimes, this includes warning labels like: “Take with food” or “Avoid prolonged sunlight” or “Federal law prohibits the transfer of this drug to any person other than the patient for whom it was prescribed.” When a friend gives you a prescription—whether it’s to cure a sore throat or to get you high—there can be serious health consequences because the medication is tailored to your friend’s needs, not yours.

Q: __________________________________________________?

A: Prescription-drug abuse is when someone takes a medication that was prescribed for someone else or purposely takes his or her own medication in a manner or dosage other than what was prescribed. Abuse can include taking a friend’s or a relative’s prescription to get high, to help you study, to lose weight, to build up muscle, or to treat pain. Even over-the-counter medications can be abused when not taken as directed.

Q: ___________________________________________________?

A: Abusers of prescription medications may mistakenly believe that because the drugs come from a pharmacy and not from a drug dealer they are safer to take, even at high doses or without a prescription. The fact is that if someone takes prescription medications in a manner that is not as a doctor intended, he or she could face serious health risks—and for certain medications those risks could be addiction and death. Also, abusing prescription drugs—including sharing prescriptions with friends—is illegal.

Q: _______________________________________________?

A: Opiates can depress respiration [slow down a person’s breathing] or stop it altogether. They can shut down the part of your brain that tells you to breathe. That’s how people die from an overdose. Mixing certain prescription drugs, and even over-the-counter medicines, with alcohol is especially dangerous. If both substances depress respiration, they may amplify each other’s effects when taken together—meaning the risk of serious harm or death becomes much greater than when either one is taken alone.

Find the phrases in the article, which mean the same as:

a) ліки, які відпускаються за рецептом; b) приймати ліки;
c) історія хвороби; d) попереджувальна етикетка;
e) зроблений у відповідності до потреб; f) ловити кайф;
g) дозування; h) ліки, які відпускаються без рецепта;
i) вгамувати біль; j) невигубна звичка;
k) наркотики; l) дихання.

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