Schools to discuss dangers of drug use
Danette Goulet
NEWPORT BEACH -- When anti-drug speakers appeared at Newport Harbor
High School last spring, students suggested that they get the message out
to kids while they are at a younger age.
With that in mind, Judy Davis will go to Mariners Elementary School
tonight and tell the story about how her son, Bobby, died of an apparent
heroin overdose a little more than a year ago.
“Harbor High kids said ‘It’s too late -- we’re either hooked or not
interested in listening anymore,’ ” Davis said. “They said ‘It’s too late
for us.’ One kid last spring told me that his sister is in the fifth
grade and she’s on cocaine.”
Davis and two other speakers will tell their stories to students and
parents from Newport Heights, Kaiser and Mariners elementary schools in
an effort to educate the community and discourage children from getting
involved with drugs.
Since her son’s death, Davis has done extensive research on drug
addiction. She said if she had known then what she knows now, it could
have helped her save Bobby’s life.
“He started with pot, which is 75% stronger now than it used to be,”
she said. “So when parents say ‘I did that. It’s OK,’ it’s not OK.”
As Davis backtracked in an effort to figure out where things went
wrong for her son -- who was an athlete, a singer and a student leader --
she realized there were signs that she had ignored.
“There was this underlying sadness in him and I couldn’t pinpoint it
exactly,” she said. “I took him to counselors and nowadays they would
have drug tested him, but I didn’t know he had depression.”
After Davis shares her story as a mother forced to deal with the harsh
realities of drugs, Dr. Daniel Headrick, the head of chemical dependence
at Hoag Hospital, will present a medical report, including the most
up-to-date research.
Once parents and students have heard Headrick’s medical evidence and
cold, hard facts, counselor William Serry will offer solutions.
Serry has worked with the Newport-Mesa Unified School District in
helping teach students a better way to deal with difficult times.
Davis hopes that by educating these families, she can save other
children’s lives.
Although it can be painful, Davis said that knowing the program has
already helped some people gives meaning to her son’s death.
“It’s very painful, it’s very ugly and it’s devastating to the human
body,” she said of drug abuse. “It destroys the human body.”
FYI
Judy Davis, Dr. Daniel Headrick and counselor William Serry will speak
to students and parents at 7 p.m. tonight in the multipurpose room at
Mariners Elementary School, 2100 Mariners Blvd., Newport Beach. The
program will last about 90 minutes. For more information, call
1-800-892-5558, Ext. 89328.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.