Pubdate: Mon, 15 Jan 2007
Source: Pierre Capital Journal (SD)
Copyright: Pierre Capital Journal, South Dakota newspapers 2007
Contact:  http://www.capjournal.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1220
Author: Travis Gulbrandson

STUDY: TEENS USING DRUGS ON THE DECLINE

PIERRE - Drug abuse awareness and education is an  integral part of 
school curricula nationwide.

For this reason local educators are pleased at the  results reported 
in the Youth Risk Behavior Survey,  which shows the number of high 
school students in South  Dakota who have used some types of drugs 
has decreased  since 1997.

The information was recently reprinted in the South  Dakota "Kids 
Count Factbook," which is published every  January by the University 
of South Dakota.

The survey itself has been performed every two years  since 1991 by 
the South Dakota Department of Education.

April Hodges, an HIV/AIDS coordinator for the  department, said the 
survey results are pooled from a  random selection of public, private 
and Bureau of  Indian Affairs schools across the state.

"There are around 1,500 kids that take part, so we get  a pretty good 
grouping," Hodges said. "And we weight  the results so that any 
response can be generalized to  any community in South Dakota."

The most recent survey results were originally  published last year 
and showed the percentage of high  schoolers who took various types 
of drugs has been  decreasing since 1997.

Among the findings for tobacco use, the survey showed  in 1997 the 
percentage of students who had tried  cigarettes as 75 percent. By 
2005 that percentage  dropped to 61 percent.

The percentage of students who had smoked at least once  within the 
last 30 days before taking part in the  survey was 44 percent in 
1997. It had dropped to 28  percent by 2005.

The survey also showed underage drinking was on the  decline, with 
the percentage of students who drank at  least once, 30 days before 
taking the survey,  decreasing from 60 percent in 1997 to 47 percent in  2005.

The number of students who smoked marijuana within 30  days of the 
survey also decreased.

These figures are encouraging to Gib Sudbeck, director  of alcohol 
and drug abuse through the Department of  Social Services.

"I'm very happy that the number of kids that are using  certain drugs 
is going down in the state," said Sudbeck  in an article from the 
Associated Press. "I think we're  doing things right, at this time."

T.F. Riggs High School principal Mike Fugitt agrees.

"There are several classes we teach here that deal with  students 
making good choices," Fugitt said. "We cover  those issues in our 
health classes and other skills for  living classes."

Fugitt said the students receive information about drug  abuse via 
speakers at schoolwide assemblies, the push  for drug awareness and 
education has been maintained  for a number of years, he said. He 
approved of the  results of the survey.

"It certainly is good news and it makes us happy,"  Fugitt said. "It 
suggests that all the efforts being  made in the schools and other 
agencies in the community  are paying off."
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MAP posted-by: Elaine