It's an epidemic that seems to just keep getting worse.
With heroin overdoses becoming more and more common, there's talk of getting the drugs' antidote, Narcan, into Ohio schools.
Some schools in Central Ohio are already carrying it.
Detective Gregg Mehling, with the Lorain County Sheriff's Office, told NewsChannel 5 it would be good to get Narcan into schools.
"To put it in schools is the next logical step. It's unfortunate we have to consider it, but that's where we're at," he said.
Detective Mehling said people who don't think kids aren't using heroin are wrong.
"Anybody that believes they don't have a problem in their community, in their school, has been living under a rock for the past couple years," he said.
Teenagers, as young as 15, dozens of them, overdosed on heroin in 2014, according to Ohio's health department.
The Lorain County's Health Commissioner, David Covell, said they aren't seeing those numbers in Lorain County, let alone, in schools.
"There haven't been a lot of occurrences of overdoses in schools, so the need is limited," he said.
But Covell said that doesn't mean Narcan shouldn't be in schools.
"Much like to...have an AED for someone having a heart attack, having somebody have it in school, wouldn't be a bad thing," Covell said.