Pubdate: Tue, 16 Nov, 1999
Source: Toronto Star (CN ON)
Copyright: 1999, The Toronto Star
Contact:  http://www.thestar.com/
Author: Phinjo Gombu, Toronto Star Staff Reporter

MORE STUDENTS ARE GETTING HIGH, SURVEY FINDS

Binge Drinking Identified As Key Drug-Use Concern

Drug use ranging from cigarettes and alcohol to cocaine and Ecstasy is 
soaring among Grades 7 to 13 students in Ontario, according to a survey by 
the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health.

Binge drinking by teens, which has risen by almost one-third in the past 
six years, is one of the key concerns identified by the survey.

About 42.4 per cent of the 920,000 students represented are binge drinkers, 
described in the Ontario Student Drug Use Survey as the consumption of more 
than five drinks on any given occasion.

"It's of serious concern," Dr. Edward Adlaf, the lead scientist involved in 
the biennial survey, said yesterday. Some 5,000 students from 111 schools 
in 38 different school boards were interviewed.

The study results, extrapolated to represent about 920,000 students, are 
accurate within 2 percentage points.

Drug use "is approaching the levels we saw several decades ago," Adlaf said.

The dramatic increase in binge drinking from 30.5 per cent in 1993 fits in 
with the other key finding in the survey: an increase in cigarette smoking, 
he said.

Despite government-funded campaigns to stop cigarette smoking and drug use, 
the number of teenaged smokers rose to 28.3 percent this year from 23.8 per 
cent six years ago.

Adlaf said both trends carry long-term health risks and are habits that are 
carried into adult life - unlike other kinds of illicit drug use, which are 
often experimental.

He said it's troubling that in just about every category of drug use, the 
trend line runs up, not down. At the same time, the percentage of students 
not using drugs fell to 26.8 per cent this year from 36.3 per cent in 1993.

Other comparisons since 1993 show:

* The percentage of students using four or more drugs rose to 17.4 per cent 
from 8 per cent.

* Cannabis use rose to 29.2 per cent from 12.7 per cent.

* The use of hallucinogens increased to 13.6 per cent from 3.1 per cent.

* Alcohol use rose to 65.7 per cent from 56.5 per cent.

The use of Ecstasy, the drug of choice for young people who attend 
all-night rave parties, grew to 4.8 per cent from 0.6 per cent since 1993. 
Since July, three deaths connected to Ecstasy overdoses have occurred in 
and around Toronto.

Adlaf, an assistant professor of public health at the University of 
Toronto, said researchers weren't able to definitively identify the cause 
of such worrying trends.

But he speculated that the resurgence in drug use among Ontario students 
reflects trends among adults and other students across North America, 
Europe and Australia.

Other reasons could be a decline in moral disapproval of drugs in society 
and a weakening perception among adolescents about the dangers of drug use, 
Adlaf said.

Adlaf described this weakening perception as "generational forgetting."

Because the 1980s were marked by a decline in drug use from an all-time 
high in the 1970s, there is a knowledge gap among teens, who are unaware of 
the dangers of overdoses and other associated risks, he said.

Other findings include:

* About one-third of students surveyed reported that they had been exposed 
to somebody trying to sell them drugs.

* The percentage of licensed student drivers who reported driving within an 
hour of having two or more drinks remained stable between 1997 and 1999 at 
about 16 per cent.

* There was a ``significant'' increase in the number of students who drank 
weekly, to 19.7 per cent of drinkers from 14.4 per cent six years ago.

* On average, cannabis users consumed the drug about 15 times a year.

* One-third of the smokers surveyed said they need a cigarette about 30 
minutes after waking up in the morning.

The survey, which began in 1968 when the Toronto District School Board 
approached the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, showed some 
interesting geographic and gender differences in drug-use patterns.

Almost 77 per cent of the students in Northern Ontario said they used 
alcohol, while only 59.4 per cent of those in Toronto said they drank.

While there was an across-the-board increase in the use of seven types of 
drugs (alcohol, cannabis, glue, solvents, medical barbiturates, medical 
stimulants and non-medical barbiturates,), there was a smaller increase in 
the use of non-medical barbiturates and alcohol among females.

As part of its campaign to educate young people, the centre announced 
yesterday the creation of a Web site www.virtual-party.org, where a party 
situation is simulated and young people can make real-life decisions about 
alcohol, drinking and driving, dating and drug use.
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