Pubdate: Thu, 27 Dec 2007
Source: Stillwater Gazette (MN)
Copyright: 2007 The Stillwater Gazette
Contact:  http://www.stillwatergazette.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3246
Author: Andrew Wallmeyer
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

SURVEY SHOWS LESS STUDENT DRUG USE, MORE DRINKING

District 834 students are more likely to use drugs and  alcohol than
their peers across the state, according to  results from the latest
Minnesota Student Survey.

Drug use was down in both groups, but alcohol use  stayed steady and
an increasing number of students  reported "binge drinking" in the
past year.

The survey is administered to sixth-, ninth- and  12th-grade students
throughout the state once every  three years. It asks questions on a
variety of topics,  ranging from attitudes toward school to exercise
habits, extracurricular involvement, drug use and  sexual activity.

This spring, 136,539 students took the voluntary  survey, 1,752 of
whom were from District 834. Statewide  results were released last
week; individual school  districts received data for their students a
couple  weeks ago.

"In both Stillwater and the state as a whole it  surprises me the
degree to which kids engage in some of  the risky behaviors - alcohol
abuse, the amount of  alcohol consumed, and the driving behavior with
regard  to alcohol and seatbelt use," District 834 Assistant
Superintendent Don Schuld said Wednesday. "As a  community, we've
really pushed education in those  areas, but it doesn't seem to be
making a huge  difference."

Of the 546 District 834 12th-graders who took the  survey, 71 percent
of boys and 73 percent of girls  reported using alcohol or drugs at
least once in the  prior year, compared with 74 percent and 72
percent,  respectively, in 2004. Across the state, 67 percent of
senior boys and 66 percent of senior girls reported  using alcohol or
drugs.

Schuld said he and other school officials will analyze  the data in
coming weeks to look for trends and, more  importantly, come up with a
plan for how to address  student alcohol and drug abuse.

One bright spot, he noted, is a continuing decrease in  student
tobacco use. In Stillwater, 50 percent of  senior boys and 40 percent
of senior girls reported  using tobacco in the prior 30 days, down
from 58  percent and 43 percent in 2004. In 2007, the statewide
figures were 42 and 27 percent, respectively.

"Whatever we do to address student alcohol and drug  use, I think we
need to figure out ways to involve more  community members in the
effort, and parents in  particular," he said. "Over the course of the
year,  kids spend much more time out in the community or at  home than
they do in school, and I think what parents  say, the amount of
vigilance they take, the example  they show can have a huge impact."

Schuld said he would like to involve more churches and  faith groups
in the effort, as well.

Sheri Vrieze, who oversees chemical health outpatient  programs at
Human Services Inc. and chairs the  Washington County Chemical Health
Action Collaborative  (CHAC), agreed that more community involvement
is  needed to address the issue.

Though she said she was pleased to see a decrease in  hard drug use,
Vrieze said she and other chemical  health specialists are alarmed by
a continuing trend  toward more extreme alcohol use.

"One area of concern is the number of kids that are  'binge drinking,'
or consuming four or five alcoholic  beverages in a short period of
time. The survey data  fit with a trend that we've been seeing here -
kids  might not be drinking at a higher rate than they have
previously, but their manner of intake continues to be  more severe in
that they're drinking to become  intoxicated," she said. "These aren't
kids sitting  around a campfire somewhere having a couple of beers.
They're drinking to become intoxicated, and that's  what's the most
concerning."

She continued: "That same thinking pattern has just  swung (from other
drugs) over to alcohol use: 'Let's  get as drunk as we can, as fast as
we can.'"

Vrieze said she and her colleagues on the CHAC will  take a detailed
look at the 2007 survey results in the  coming months. She expects the
group will publicly  present its findings in late February or early
March.

Like Schuld, Vrieze said the group will have to  re-evaluate its
strategies in light of the survey data.

"Underage drinking hasn't gone down, so all the  messages that are out
there about not drinking and  driving - and there are quite a few -
are still not  reaching them," she said. "It just goes to show what
those of us in the profession have always believed:  alcohol remains
the most dangerous thing for kids to  use, and the most accepted."

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Complete Minnesota Student Survey for the state and  District 834 can
be found along with the online version  of this story at
http://www.stillwatergazette.com/articles/2007/12/27/2007SchoolElectionarchive.txt
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MAP posted-by: Steve Heath