Pubdate: Sat, 08 Dec 2007
Source: Billings Gazette, The (MT)
Copyright: 2007 The Billings Gazette
Contact:  http://www.billingsgazette.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/515
Author: Jennifer Mckee
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States)

INDIAN STUDENTS' USE OF METH DROPS SHARPLY

However, Rate Remains More Than Twice That Of All High 
Schoolers

Gazette State Bureau HELENA - Montana's American Indian  high school
students report using the drug  methamphetamine at more than twice the
rate reported by  all Montana students.

However, meth use among Indians has fallen dramatically  since 1999,
when more than one-fourth of Indian high  school students on Montana's
reservations reported  using meth at least once.

Almost 11 percent of Indian high school students on  Montana's seven
reservations reported using meth at  least once in their lives in the
2007 Youth Risk  Behavior Survey, a routine questionnaire distributed
to  high school students around the state every two years.  For
American Indian students in Montana's urban areas,  the rate was 10.5
percent.

That compares with just 4.6 percent of all Montana high  school
students who reported using meth, a highly  addictive drug.

Statewide results of the survey were announced in  September, but
information specific to Indian students  became available only recently.

Significant declineDespite the higher rate of meth use  among Indians,
Superintendent of Public Instruction  Linda McCulloch said she was
pleased by the significant  decline since 1999.

Back then, figures show, nearly 27 percent of  reservation high school
students said they had used  meth at least once. More than 24 percent
of Indian  students off reservations also reported using the drug.

Today, those figures have fallen by more than half,  said McCulloch,
whose office conducts and tallies the  survey. She attributed the fall
to many factors,  including widespread public advertising campaigns.

"I think it's very positive," she said. "I think it  says a lot out
about our students paying attention to  information they get in
school, information they get  with the Montana Meth Project campaign
and on our  reservations."

Methamphetamine is a stimulant that can be made from  certain cold
medicines and other common chemicals.  Although the drug can be made
locally, newer laws  limiting access to cold medicines have begun to
shift  production of the drug out-of-state.

In September 2005, software entrepreneur Tom Siebel,  who owns a ranch
in Montana, started the Montana Meth  Project. The effort features
gritty advertisements  showcasing the negative effects of meth use.

McCulloch and several Indian leaders and educators said  Friday that
they thought the higher rates of meth use  among Indians had several
causes, principally poverty.

Social problems"Montana's reservation communities have  a higher
poverty rate, extreme unemployment," said  state Sen. Carol Juneau,
D-Browning, a former educator  at Browning Public Schools. "If you
look at any group  in those concentrated areas of poverty, you are
going  to have more social problems."

Poor families often can't afford addiction treatment,  even if such
services were available, she said.

Rep. Norma Bixby, D-Lame Deer, said another explanation  is the higher
high school dropout rate on many  reservations. Those dropouts don't
just disappear, she  said. They still have friends in high school, and
if  they become addicted to meth, they may start sharing  the drug
with students still attending class. Bixby  also said the lack of
resources on reservations makes  it harder for kids recovering form
addiction to stay  clean.

Bixby, who is also tribal education director for the  Northern
Cheyenne Tribe, said schools might have a  greater role to play by
staying open after school hours  for family recreation, giving kids a
safe, constructive  place to be.

"A lot of this happens after school," she said.
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MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin