Pubdate: Fri, 30 Nov 2007
Source: Billings Gazette, The (MT)
Copyright: 2007 The Billings Gazette
Contact:  http://www.billingsgazette.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/515
Author: Laura Tode
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States)

BILLINGS TEENS BUCK STATE TRENDS, BEHAVIOR SURVEY SHOWS

Fewer high school students in  Billings use tobacco than their peers
across the state  and report less frequent use of alcohol, according
to a  recent Billings School District 2 survey.

More Billings students, however, have driven drunk,  attempted suicide
and reported being raped than people  their age in the rest of the
state.

Those were some of the findings in the Youth Risk  Behavior Survey,
which was administered this fall to a  random selection of 100
students in each SD2 high  school.

Across the state, 20 percent of high school students  surveyed said
they smoked 20 or more cigarettes in the  previous 30 days, compared
with 16.8 percent of  Billings students. Smoking among Billings
students is  down from 2005, when 19.3 percent reported frequent 
smoking. Almost 13 percent of the state's teens said  they smoked
every day, but in Billings, only 6 percent  reported a daily smoking
habit. In Billings, 8.6  percent students admitted using smokeless
tobacco,  compared with the 12.9 percent state average.

Teen alcohol consumption - meaning a student who  reported drinking
during the previous 30 days - is  lower among Billings students than
among students in  the rest of the state by about 4 percent but has 
increased locally by about 3 percent since 2005.

Marijuana use among teens in Billings mirrors the state  average, with
about 21 percent of students reporting  use in the previous 30 days.
Slightly more Billings  students have tried cocaine and
methamphetamines than  their state peers.

Thirteen percent of Billings students said they have  attempted
suicide, while the average statewide was 7.9  percent. But the number
of students who reported  seriously considering suicide was the same
in Billings  as in the rest of the state - about 15 percent.

SD2 administrators are reluctant to put too much weight  into the
survey. It is self-reported, which isn't as  reliable as other
measures because students tend to  underreport illegal or unhealthy
behavior. The margin  of error across the state is plus or minus 3
percent.

However, the information from the survey may be more  valuable when
combined with other information the  district gathers on student drug
and alcohol use,  including information from teachers, counselors and
the  Billings Police Department's school resource officers.

"The (survey) gives us general information, but in our  district it's
a pretty small snapshot," said Scott  Anderson, SD2 secondary
education director.

Across the state, 4,030 high school students from 47  schools
participated in the survey, which is voluntary  and confidential.
Designed by the U.S. Centers for  Disease Control and Prevention, the
survey asks 90  questions concerning violence and injury; drug,
alcohol  and tobacco use; sexual behavior; physical inactivity;  and
dietary habits.

The survey is administered in odd-numbered years. In  even-numbered
years, SD2 administers the Prevention  Needs Assessment, which is
given to eighth-, 10th-, and  12th-grade students. The Prevention
Needs Assessment is  another method of measuring the effectiveness of
the  various programs and intervention plans SD2 uses. The  data from
the Prevention Needs Assessment tracks  specific groups of students
over a period of several  years, said Kathy Aders, the director of
Yellowstone  County Safe and Drug Free School Consortium.

The Youth Risk survey is also administered to middle  school students,
and more than 400 Billings middle  schoolers completed it.

However, this year the Montana Office of Public  Instruction changed
the format of the survey for middle  school students, Aders said, so
comparison of data is  unreliable until students take the survey again
in  2009. Before this year, middle school students took the  same
survey that was administered to high school  students.

From Aders' perspective, Billings students are about  where she
expects when it comes to drug, alcohol and  tobacco use.

"Over the years, we continue to improve a little at a  time," Aders
said. "I think it's a cooperation of  parents, school and community
and working with a  combination of different programs."

Anderson said Rimrock Foundation offers drug and  alcohol dependency
counseling at West and Senior high  schools, and tobacco-cessation
classes are offered at  high schools as the need arises. The
Tumbleweed Program  for runaway youths has a presence in the high
schools,  and school counselors also help students in need.

"There's a reason it's getting better," Anderson said.  "It's because
you're doing something. We're always  adding programs. There's always
something we can do."
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MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin