Pubdate: Wed, 21 Nov 2007
Source: Cape Breton Post (CN NS)
Copyright: 2007 Cape Breton Post
Contact:  http://www.capebretonpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/777
Author: Nancy King
Referenced: Nova Scotia Student Drug Use 2007: 
http://www.gov.ns.ca/hpp/repPub/NS_Highlights_2007.pdf
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?241 (Methamphetamine - Canada)

DRUG-USE SURVEY HELPS TARGET PROGRAMS, RESOURCES: OFFICIAL

SYDNEY - Results from a survey of student drug use are  useful in
helping agencies target their programs and  resources, but also allow
them to see areas where  information is lacking, the director of
Addiction  Services says.

Everett Harris was reacting to the release this week of  the most
recent survey of student drug use in Nova  Scotia. There were nearly
4,500 surveys completed  provincewide by students in Grades 7, 9, 10
and 12.

The drugs most commonly used were alcohol, tobacco and
cannabis.

Forty-two per cent of students reported being  drug-free, up from 40
per cent from the previous survey  in 2002 and from 35 per cent in
1998. It showed that 16  per cent of students smoke cigarettes, down
from 24 per  cent in 2002; while 52 per cent drink alcohol, with 28
per cent of those students reporting having more than  five drinks in
one sitting.

A breakdown by region is not available, a spokesperson  for the Office
of Health Promotion said this week, but  results aren't believed to
vary much from one area of  the province to another.

Harris said he was not surprised that what he described  as
traditional drugs still account for the lion share  of use by
students, adding he believes in some areas  Cape Breton may be
slightly higher than the provincial  figures, particularly in some
drinking patterns and  cannabis use.

"This is a really good survey, there are really high  rates of
participation," Harris said, adding since the  survey has not been
conducted a number of times , it's  possible to go back and make
comparisons.

"There's that kind of consistency and continuity as  well as it being
good data with a lot of participation.  There's need for other kinds
of research to be done. We  know that kids drink a lot but we need to
know the  context in which they do that to have a better
understanding. I think we have to go out and talk to  them."

While what are considered to be more exotic drugs, are  present, the
number reporting using them is relatively  small, such as seven per
cent having used ecstacy and  1.6 per cent having used crystal meth.

The survey provides good information, Harris said, and  it also points
out where knowledge is lacking, for  example, usage patterns of young
people not in the  school system.

"There certainly are alarming things about the  non-school population,
and I think the study points out  that we need to get better at trying
to understand  what's going on with (them)," he said. "We know that
there are some non-school kids that are using at  younger and younger
ages and in fact there are some  small numbers of people who are using
in a very  dangerous way at really early ages, so we'd like to
understand that a bit better and be able to reach those  people."

That will require talking to them, Harris said, and he  expects focus
groups to take place in the next year.  The agency is also proposing
following a model  previously attempted in Vancouver, that would see
nurses go out on the street, working directly with both  adults and
young people.

"It's probably a population that if they're not going  to school and
they're hanging out, they're probably not  going to clinics and if
they do end up in a health-care  setting, it's probably in some kind
of crisis," Harris  said.

He added it's important to continue to attempt to get  the message
across that it's not a normal thing to use  drugs and alcohol.

The 2007 Student Drug Use Survey was conducted in  partnership with
the Department of Health Promotion and  Protection, Department of
Education and Dalhousie  University community health and epidemiology.
It was  the fourth time the Atlantic provinces collected and  analyzed
standardized data. The full report and Nova  Scotia highlights are
available on the Health Promotion  and Protection website at
www.gov.ns.ca/hpp/repPub/NS_Highlights_2007.pdf
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake