News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Study: Youthful Drug Use Escalates |
Title: | US: Study: Youthful Drug Use Escalates |
Published On: | 2002-09-06 |
Source: | Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-29 18:18:38 |
STUDY: YOUTHFUL DRUG USE ESCALATES
Washington --- Use of marijuana, cocaine and other illegal drugs increased
sharply among young Americans last year, according to a new government
survey. The study also found sharp increases in the nonmedical use of
prescription painkillers and tranquilizers. Only tobacco use declined.
John Walters, director of the White House Office of National Drug Control
Policy, attributed the increased marijuana use to "a fundamental
misunderstanding" propagated by the baby boomer generation that marijuana
is safe and should be legal.
"We have sent the wrong message, and we have to correct that," Walters said.
"Marijuana is not some harmless chemical toy, but a clear and present
danger to the health and well-being of all its users," said Tommy Thompson,
secretary of Health and Human Services.
The findings, contained in the 2001 National Household Survey on Drug
Abuse, are based on 70,000 interviews with people aged 12 and older.
The percentage who said they were marijuana users jumped to 5.4 percent in
2001 from 4.8 percent in 2000. The numbers had held roughly steady between
1996 and 2000. Cocaine users jumped to 0.07 percent from 0.05 percent.
The worrisome factor in the marijuana increase, according to Thompson, is a
spurt in first-time users last year, most of them under 18. That number ---
about 2.4 million --- is down significantly from a mid-'70s peak of 3.2
million, but it is higher than in most of the 1990s.
Overall, 15.9 million Americans older than 12 reported using an illicit
drug in the month before being interviewed for the survey. That amounts to
7.1 percent of that population group in 2001 vs. 6.3 percent in 2000.
Nearly one-fifth of 18-to-25-year-olds said they used illicit drugs.
Among fashionable drugs, use of the hallucinogen Ecstasy and abuse of the
prescription painkiller Oxycontin both have more than tripled since 1998.
The "good news," Thompson said, was a continuing decline in smoking among
12-to-17-year-olds. That number is about one-third lower than it was in 1997.
Otherwise, "We lost a lot of ground in the '90s," said Charles Curie,
director of the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration,
the HHS agency that sponsors the annual study.
Curie blamed acceptance of marijuana and peer pressure for the upsurge.
"When you start with marijuana, it is easy to get to the next step,"
Thompson said. The administration proposes to increase funding to anti-drug
use campaigns, community organizations and faith-based groups, he said.
A special committee of the Canadian Senate reached the opposite conclusion
in findings disclosed Wednesday. It concluded marijuana is less harmful
than alcohol and not a "gateway" drug that commonly leads users to more
serious narcotics.
According to the Canadian committee's report, criminalizing marijuana use
is "an utterly irrational restraint that has nothing to do with scientific
or public health considerations."
Bruce Mirken, spokesman for the Marijuana Policy Project, a
Washington-based group that wants the drug to be legal but regulated,
suggested the Canadians were right.
"It is at least worth discussing the possibility that what we are doing is
not working. But we have our government refusing to discuss it," he said.
Washington --- Use of marijuana, cocaine and other illegal drugs increased
sharply among young Americans last year, according to a new government
survey. The study also found sharp increases in the nonmedical use of
prescription painkillers and tranquilizers. Only tobacco use declined.
John Walters, director of the White House Office of National Drug Control
Policy, attributed the increased marijuana use to "a fundamental
misunderstanding" propagated by the baby boomer generation that marijuana
is safe and should be legal.
"We have sent the wrong message, and we have to correct that," Walters said.
"Marijuana is not some harmless chemical toy, but a clear and present
danger to the health and well-being of all its users," said Tommy Thompson,
secretary of Health and Human Services.
The findings, contained in the 2001 National Household Survey on Drug
Abuse, are based on 70,000 interviews with people aged 12 and older.
The percentage who said they were marijuana users jumped to 5.4 percent in
2001 from 4.8 percent in 2000. The numbers had held roughly steady between
1996 and 2000. Cocaine users jumped to 0.07 percent from 0.05 percent.
The worrisome factor in the marijuana increase, according to Thompson, is a
spurt in first-time users last year, most of them under 18. That number ---
about 2.4 million --- is down significantly from a mid-'70s peak of 3.2
million, but it is higher than in most of the 1990s.
Overall, 15.9 million Americans older than 12 reported using an illicit
drug in the month before being interviewed for the survey. That amounts to
7.1 percent of that population group in 2001 vs. 6.3 percent in 2000.
Nearly one-fifth of 18-to-25-year-olds said they used illicit drugs.
Among fashionable drugs, use of the hallucinogen Ecstasy and abuse of the
prescription painkiller Oxycontin both have more than tripled since 1998.
The "good news," Thompson said, was a continuing decline in smoking among
12-to-17-year-olds. That number is about one-third lower than it was in 1997.
Otherwise, "We lost a lot of ground in the '90s," said Charles Curie,
director of the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration,
the HHS agency that sponsors the annual study.
Curie blamed acceptance of marijuana and peer pressure for the upsurge.
"When you start with marijuana, it is easy to get to the next step,"
Thompson said. The administration proposes to increase funding to anti-drug
use campaigns, community organizations and faith-based groups, he said.
A special committee of the Canadian Senate reached the opposite conclusion
in findings disclosed Wednesday. It concluded marijuana is less harmful
than alcohol and not a "gateway" drug that commonly leads users to more
serious narcotics.
According to the Canadian committee's report, criminalizing marijuana use
is "an utterly irrational restraint that has nothing to do with scientific
or public health considerations."
Bruce Mirken, spokesman for the Marijuana Policy Project, a
Washington-based group that wants the drug to be legal but regulated,
suggested the Canadians were right.
"It is at least worth discussing the possibility that what we are doing is
not working. But we have our government refusing to discuss it," he said.
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