Pubdate: Wed,  5 Apr 2000
Source: Independent, The (UK)
Copyright: 2000 Independent Newspapers (UK) Ltd.
Contact:  1 Canada Square, Canary Wharf, London E14 5DL
Website: http://www.independent.co.uk/
Author: Cherry Norton, Social Affairs Correspondent

RURAL DRUG USERS START ON HEROIN AT 15, SAYS STUDY

The number of teenage heroin users in Britain's small rural towns is rising 
at an unprecedented rate, according to research that shows many users are 
starting at 15.

A study published today suggests that heroin outbreaks among young people 
are occurring in towns and rural areas that have had no previous history of 
the drug.

The findings have alarmed drug specialists because they indicate children 
are experimenting with heroin two years earlier on average than during the 
heroin epidemic of the 1980s and that, contrary to popular belief, most of 
the teenage drug users did not come from abusive backgrounds, but had a 
"normal" upbringing.

"These teenage users are younger and more naive than expected. They live in 
towns in rural areas where there is no heroin history, no junkies on the 
streets and they seem to have no idea that the drug is addictive [nor] 
understand its potency," said Professor Howard Parker, of the Department of 
Social Policy and Social Work at the University of Manchester, who 
conducted the research.

The study, published by DrugScope, a new national charity combining the 
Institute for the Study of Drug Dependence and the Standing Conference on 
Drug Abuse, showed that three-quarters of young heroin users also used or 
had tried crack cocaine.

The researchers visited a small city and three towns and asked 86 young 
people between 15 and 20 using drugs detailed questions about their habits. 
Although the sample was small, the quality of the research exposed the 
extend of hidden heroin use in Britain. The study found that although the 
teen-agers came from a range of socio-economic backgrounds, most had had 
little parental supervision from the age of 13.

"They were early smokers and drinkers and moved into a phase of florid 
drugs experimentation starting with heroin at 15," Professor Parker said.

The young people were normally introduced to heroin by a friend, and smoked 
rather than injected the drug. Within two or three years, two-thirds of the 
teenagers were injecting. Heroin appeared to lead on to cocaine and crack 
cocaine, with 75 per cent taking crack cocaine and 55 per cent cocaine. The 
findings showed heroin users had tried most other drugs: 99 per cent had 
tried cannabis, 92 per cent amphetamines, 83 per cent LSD, and 82 per cent 
tranquillisers.

Those surveyed did not use local drug advice servicesand distrusted adult 
authority. Seven out of 10 had tried to come off the drug alone, asking 
their parents to lock them in their room while they went through withdrawal.

"We are definitely seeing quite together middle-class families with one son 
or daughter on heroin," Professor Parker said. "These people tend to treat 
their children privately and do not appear at local drug services because 
they want to keep it quiet." The users spent on average more than UKP160 a 
week, or UKP8,000 a year, on drugs.

Roger Howard, chief executive of DrugScope, said: "This extremely important 
study provides us with a crucial insight into the world of teenage heroin 
users. Many of the youngsters interviewed had no idea of the potency of 
heroin before they tried it."
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