Pubdate: Fri, 19 Jul 2002
Source: Deseret News (UT)
Copyright: 2002 Deseret News Publishing Corp.
Contact:  http://www.desnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/124
Author: Associated Press

ANTI-DRUG MESSAGE SINKING IN

WASHINGTON - Grown-ups who tell kids not to smoke, drink or take drugs are 
getting their message across.

A new survey shows that drug, alcohol and cigarette use among sixth- to 
12th-graders is at the lowest level in years, partly because adults are 
doing more to keep them away from illicit substances.

Parents and teachers are warning students about drug use and encouraging 
kids to nurture other interests by joining extracurricular school and 
religious activities, according to the 2001-02 Pride Survey, released this 
week.

The number of students using any illicit drug - including marijuana, 
cocaine, heroin, hallucinogens - dropped to 22.3 percent, the lowest level 
registered by the study since the 1993-94 school year.

The percentages of high school students who said they drank alcohol, 65 
percent, or smoked cigarettes, 36 percent, in the previous 12 months were 
the lowest in the 15-year history of the Pride Surveys.

The results, from data collected between August and June, are the best 
report on adolescent behaviors in more than a decade and may reflect a 
reaction to the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, officials said.

"Following 9/11, Americans seemed to refocus on family, community, 
spirituality and nation," said survey author Thomas J. Gleaton. "That 
renewed awareness shows up in the data."

"The Sept. 11 attacks sent shock waves through our nation's schools just as 
kids were beginning their school year," said John P. Walters, director of 
National Drug Control Policy. "This year's Pride Survey suggests that young 
Americans may be taking their lives and communities more seriously by 
saying no to drugs."

The survey was conducted at schools that contracted with Pride Surveys to 
question students during the 2001-02 academic year. The questionnaires were 
answered, voluntarily and anonymously, by 101,882 students in 21 states.

A 1998 federal law named the Atlanta-based survey as a measure of the 
effectiveness of White House drug policy.

In the 2000-01 survey, the percentage of 12th-graders who used an illicit 
drug in the previous 12 months had remained constant for the fifth straight 
year at about 41 percent. This year's survey, however, shows a decline to 
37 percent.

Kids who are warned away from drugs and encouraged to engage in 
extracurricular activities are less likely to take drugs, the survey found.

Among students whose teachers warned them away from drugs "a lot," 15 
percent used illicit substances. In contrast, 32 percent of students whose 
teachers "never" talked to them about the subject used drugs, the survey found.

Among kids who participated in extracurricular school programs, 17 percent 
used drugs, compared with 32 percent of kids who don't participate.

Similarly, among kids who attended religious services "a lot," 13 percent 
used drugs. Among kids who "never" attended services, 36 percent used drugs.

Gleaton said that some individual anti-drug campaigns resulted in a 
decrease in drug use.

In Ohio, for example, Pride Surveys found that nine out of 10 students in 
grades six, eight, 10 and 12 said they have seen and heard anti-drug 
commercials on television and radio within the previous three months. 
Seventy-four percent of respondents there said the commercials have made 
them less likely to use drugs.

The national survey found some signs, however, that certain drugs have 
taken firm hold among teens. Among sixth-through eighth-graders, the use of 
cocaine, downers and heroin was unchanged for annual and monthly use. 
Monthly inhalant and hallucinogen use also remained level, the survey said.

Among 12th-graders, the monthly use of cocaine, heroin and steroids 
remained the same, according to the survey.
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