Texas to outlaw minors from buying popular cough medicine

Starting in September, Texans under 18 years old will no longer be able to buy popular over-the-counter cough medicines like NyQuil and Robitussin under a bill Gov. Greg Abbott signed earlier this month.

House Bill 1518, by state Rep. Garnet Coleman (D-Houston), will prevent minors from buying products that contain dextromethorphan, a cough suppressant found in more than 100 over-the-counter cough medicines.

About 3% of teens in 12th grade reported taking large doses of cough medicine to get high, according to a 2017 study from the National Institute on Drug Abuse. In large doses, dextromethorphan can cause hallucinations and is also known as “robotripping.” Coleman said he hopes the law will prevent teens from using cough medicine as a “gateway drug” to more dangerous substances.

“We know that young people will find anything that will alter their states, and particularly substances that are legal, and when used inappropriately, they get high,” Coleman said. “The first thing we need to do is crack down on the access to those types of of legal over-the-counter drugs.”

Texas joins 18 other states that have passed similar laws restricting access to the cough suppressant. In January, U.S. Reps. Doris Matsui, D-Calif., and Bill Johnson, R-Ohio, filed a bill that would prohibit selling dextromethorphan to minors nationwide. However, the bill has not moved since it was filed.

The Texas law will also strengthen the connection between pharmacies and their surrounding community, said Chris Krese, a spokesperson for the National Association of Chain Drugs Stores, a trade group that represents pharmacy chains including Walmart and Walgreens.

“Pharmacies, as the face of neighborhood healthcare, also have a commitment to preventing abuse and addiction,” Krese said. “We really want to maintain safe and strong communities and helping to prevent the abuse of certain products is very much integral to that.”

Stores caught violating the new law will first receive a warning, then a $150 fine for a second violation and $250 fines for every violation after that, according to the bill.

Even after the law takes effect Sept. 1, Coleman said Texans under 18 will be able to buy medicine to treat a cough or a cold that doesn’t include dextromethorphan.

“There’s no dextromethorphan in a cough drop,” he said.

Snapchat, YouTube and G Suite back online after widespread outages

UPDATE:

The outage impacted Snapchat, YouTube, Discord, a gaming app, and a variety of Google sites. An issue with network congestion in Google Cloud played a role in the outage, said Google.

As of 4:22 p.m. CST, services on the platforms are back up, Mashable said.

 

4:05 p.m.:

Users of both Snapchat and YouTube experienced outages in the afternoon of June 2. The outages impacted people from across the globe. In the United States, users in several cities, including Dallas, Chicago, San Diego and Tampa, reported outages, according to a live outage map from downdetector.com. YouTube users also reported outages across the globe

Both Snapchat and YouTube acknowledged the outages on their Twitter support accounts. Snapchat tweeted out that they were aware of the issue at 12:20 p.m. CST, while YouTube said they were “working to fix it” at 12:48 p.m. CST

We will continue to update this story as it develops.