News (Media Awareness Project) - US HI: Study Says Alcohol Abuse Rising |
Title: | US HI: Study Says Alcohol Abuse Rising |
Published On: | 2001-03-20 |
Source: | Honolulu Advertiser (HI) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-01 16:19:42 |
STUDY SAYS ALCOHOL ABUSE RISING
The number of Hawai'i residents who needed treatment for drug and
alcohol abuse increased nearly five percent to 82,000 people from
1995 to 1998, according to the latest survey released yesterday by
the state Department of Health.
And while illegal drugs like crystal methamphetamine, heroin and
hallucinogens normally draw the headlines, the most damaging
substance being abused in Hawai'i is alcohol, according to Elaine
Wilson, chief of the department's alcohol and drug abuse division.
Alcohol abusers in Hawai'i numbered 67,000 in 1998, or 6.7 percent of
the population, compared to 57,000 in 1995, according to the new
Hawai'i Substance Abuse Adult Telephone Survey, Wilson said.
The survey, in which 5,050 adults were called, was released yesterday
at a press conference at the Health Department.
Researchers have been analyzing the data since the survey, officials said.
Wilson said she would not downplay the problems created by illegal
drugs, but said the sheer number of problem drinkers makes them one
of the most challenging populations for prevention and treatment.
"These (alcohol abusers) are the people who kill other people when
they drive, who are losing their jobs, who are involved in domestic
violence and whose homes are chaotic for children," Wilson said.
State Health Director Bruce Anderson said drug and alcohol abuse are
the greatest preventable cause of death and illness in Hawai'i.
The statistics do not bode well for the future: The greatest increase
in heavy use of alcohol (3 drinks or more every day for 30 days, or
five drinks at least once at one sitting in the same period) is among
young females, Wilson said, nearly a third of whom now abuse alcohol.
That's up from just a fifth of young women 18 to 24 years of age
using alcohol heavily in 1995, the study said.
And adults under the legal drinking age, 18 to 20 years old, report
the highest percentage of heavy alcohol use, according to D. William
Wood, the University of Hawai'i sociologist who was the principal
investigator for the study.
"This is a problem that is not going away," he said. "The news is not
real good."
Wilson said increasing alcohol abuse in Hawai'i is counter to a
national trend. She added that prevention is the key to reducing drug
and alcohol problems, and challenged the community to step up
"counter-advertising" campaigns to make young people, in particular,
aware of the dangers of alcohol.
Hawai'i continues to lead the nation in crystal methamphetamine use,
about 15 to 20 percent higher than national numbers, a distinction it
has held since about 1996, Wilson said. In 1998, an estimated 8,100
adults needed treatment for use of "ice," compared to 6,200 in 1995,
she said.
Heroin experimentation has tripled to an estimated 8,100 adults,
two-thirds of whom had used heroin more than once or twice. Increases
were greatest among young adults.
Marijuana use remains high in Hawai'i, with almost five percent of
the population involved in frequent use, spiking to as high as eight
and nine percent on the Big Island and Kaua'i, respectively, the
study showed.
The only illegal drug for which there was a substantial decline in
both use and treatment needs for all age, sex and ethnic groups was
cocaine, the study indicated.
Hawaiians and Caucasians are the leaders in substance abuse, compared
to other ethnic groups, the study said.
The number of Hawai'i residents who needed treatment for drug and
alcohol abuse increased nearly five percent to 82,000 people from
1995 to 1998, according to the latest survey released yesterday by
the state Department of Health.
And while illegal drugs like crystal methamphetamine, heroin and
hallucinogens normally draw the headlines, the most damaging
substance being abused in Hawai'i is alcohol, according to Elaine
Wilson, chief of the department's alcohol and drug abuse division.
Alcohol abusers in Hawai'i numbered 67,000 in 1998, or 6.7 percent of
the population, compared to 57,000 in 1995, according to the new
Hawai'i Substance Abuse Adult Telephone Survey, Wilson said.
The survey, in which 5,050 adults were called, was released yesterday
at a press conference at the Health Department.
Researchers have been analyzing the data since the survey, officials said.
Wilson said she would not downplay the problems created by illegal
drugs, but said the sheer number of problem drinkers makes them one
of the most challenging populations for prevention and treatment.
"These (alcohol abusers) are the people who kill other people when
they drive, who are losing their jobs, who are involved in domestic
violence and whose homes are chaotic for children," Wilson said.
State Health Director Bruce Anderson said drug and alcohol abuse are
the greatest preventable cause of death and illness in Hawai'i.
The statistics do not bode well for the future: The greatest increase
in heavy use of alcohol (3 drinks or more every day for 30 days, or
five drinks at least once at one sitting in the same period) is among
young females, Wilson said, nearly a third of whom now abuse alcohol.
That's up from just a fifth of young women 18 to 24 years of age
using alcohol heavily in 1995, the study said.
And adults under the legal drinking age, 18 to 20 years old, report
the highest percentage of heavy alcohol use, according to D. William
Wood, the University of Hawai'i sociologist who was the principal
investigator for the study.
"This is a problem that is not going away," he said. "The news is not
real good."
Wilson said increasing alcohol abuse in Hawai'i is counter to a
national trend. She added that prevention is the key to reducing drug
and alcohol problems, and challenged the community to step up
"counter-advertising" campaigns to make young people, in particular,
aware of the dangers of alcohol.
Hawai'i continues to lead the nation in crystal methamphetamine use,
about 15 to 20 percent higher than national numbers, a distinction it
has held since about 1996, Wilson said. In 1998, an estimated 8,100
adults needed treatment for use of "ice," compared to 6,200 in 1995,
she said.
Heroin experimentation has tripled to an estimated 8,100 adults,
two-thirds of whom had used heroin more than once or twice. Increases
were greatest among young adults.
Marijuana use remains high in Hawai'i, with almost five percent of
the population involved in frequent use, spiking to as high as eight
and nine percent on the Big Island and Kaua'i, respectively, the
study showed.
The only illegal drug for which there was a substantial decline in
both use and treatment needs for all age, sex and ethnic groups was
cocaine, the study indicated.
Hawaiians and Caucasians are the leaders in substance abuse, compared
to other ethnic groups, the study said.
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