WCPO: UC empowers teens to address opioid crisis

UC professor Farrah Jacquez helps high school students conduct research on local drug use to come up with better intervention strategies

WCPO-Channel 9 examined a new University of Cincinnati program that is helping high school students learn more about drug use among their peers.

UC associate professor of psychology Farrah Jacquez is working with two Cincinnati-area high schools to steer student-led research into drug dependency.

The program, called Youth Built Change, was funded with a grant from the National Institutes of Health. Students worked on eight different projects. Some conducted surveys on drug use among middle schoolers to understand the scope of the issue and come up with more effective intervention strategies, Jacquez told WCPO.

"Their lived experience is really what's going to help us solve problems," Jacquez said.

Students presented their results at the end of the first year of the five-year project.

Farrah Jacquez sits at a classroom desk talking to someone.

UC psychology professor Farrah Jacquez, right, is overseeing a program called Youth Built Change that gets students involved in community health issues. Photo/Andrew Higley/UC Creative Services

Related Stories

1

How AI might help nonprofits

November 7, 2025

University of Cincinnati Professor Victoria LaPoe examined whether people respond differently to AI-created messaging in nonprofit advertising.

2

Shining like a disco ball: Rachel Hoermann’s story of finding passion and purpose at UC

November 6, 2025

Rachel Hoermann has dreamed of becoming a writer since childhood. But like many who grew up in Ohio’s rust belt, the idea of going to college felt out of reach. For years, she cycled through work that never quite satisfied her creative drive. That changed when she came across a box that once belonged to her father—a discovery that would alter the course of her life.

3

New hires reflect UC’s commitment to research, innovation and impact

November 6, 2025

With the 2025-26 school year in full swing, the College of Arts and Sciences has welcomed five faculty members to lead departments that span from chemistry to journalism. Dean James Mack said these new hires “reflect our unwavering commitment to ‘Discovery in Action,’ as we continue to enhance our academic and research excellence”. With these additions, the future of UC is in good hands, and students can look forward to new opportunities for learning, research, and innovation.