Provider Toolkit:
Protecting Young Patients from Fake Prescription Pills
Your teen patients can buy pills that look like medicine online or at the mall tonight. Here's how to protect them.
This toolkit was created for healthcare providers who treat adolescents and young adults. Developed by Song for Charlie—the national nonprofit behind The New Drug Talk—in collaboration with medical and mental health professionals, it provides evidence-informed, ready-to-use materials about fake prescription pills made with fentanyl and other potent chemicals. These materials support fundamental prevention and harm reduction conversations with patients and families, without adding time to already-packed appointments.
Whether you're looking for waiting room materials, email templates for your patient portal, or handouts to send home after visits, everything here is designed for immediate implementation in busy practices.
Over 2,000 Americans under 25 die from fentanyl annually, mostly due to fake prescription pills. Fake prescription pills made with fentanyl and other dangerous chemicals look exactly like real Adderall, Xanax, Percocet, etc.—and teens can access them through social media platforms within minutes. Research from Song for Charlie shows nearly half of teens don't even know these counterfeit prescription pills exist.
Brief conversations during routine visits can significantly reduce risk—these materials make those conversations easier.
Download these ready-to-print flyers, brochures, posters
Use in your normal office-to-patient communications—like your office’s patient portal, after visit summaries and even embed the information within frequently used dot phrases
All materials are designed for turnkey use in busy practices. Printed materials can be run off on your office printer. Digital materials are copy-paste friendly and/or simple email attachments.
These materials were developed by Song for Charlie in collaboration with pediatricians, addiction medicine specialists, mental health professionals and subject matter experts.
Consultants:
Laura Murphy, MD, FAAP, Pediatrician with The Children’s Clinic, Portland OR
Jill Pearson, MD FAAP, Pediatrician, President of PathWays Pediatric Consulting, former Medical Director for Salem Health Pediatric Hospital Medicine, consultant for Marion County Substance Use Prevention
Olivia Rae Wright, MD Family Medicine & Addiction Medicine Specialist, Peacehealth Southwest Medical Center, Vancouver, OHSU ECHO Faculty