Rave Radio: Offline (0/0)
Email: Password:
News (Media Awareness Project) - Europe: One in Seven Under-13s Have Tried Cannabis
Title:Europe: One in Seven Under-13s Have Tried Cannabis
Published On:2007-11-23
Source:Guardian, The (UK)
Fetched On:2008-01-11 18:13:35
ONE IN SEVEN UNDER-13S HAVE TRIED CANNABIS

Britain Worst in EU on Child Drug Abuse, Report Finds

Adult Cocaine Use Rises, but Cannabis Levels Down

Evidence of a growing pre-teen drug problem in Britain emerged
yesterday with research showing that one in seven children have tried
cannabis before the age of 13.

The study, reported by the EU's drug agency, says there has been an
explosion in the number of children under 15 going into drug treatment
across Europe.

The annual report from the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and
Drug Addiction shows that the UK's drug problem among young teenagers
is far worse than in any other EU country. The research shows that 13%
of British schoolchildren say they first tried cannabis before they
were 13. This is much higher than any other European country - it
compares with 8% in the Netherlands and Ireland - and is more than
three times the EU average.

Britain also accounts for most of the children under 15 who go into
drug treatment each year, with 2,251 out of the 3,237 new patients in
Europe, the latest figures show. The number of young British children
in treatment, mainly for using cannabis or sniffing inhalants, has
grown threefold from 797 in 2000.

The European report says a main factor in the crisis is children
growing up in the families of Britain's 330,000 problem drug users:
"Research found that at the age of 15, young people whose parents had
used drugs during the previous year were more than twice as likely to
have used drugs than those whose parents had not used drugs," it
reported, adding that drug use by elder brothers and sisters can also
be a factor.

The report says that targeting such families, as well as developing
treatment programmes for the very young, now needs to be a priority.

The EU drugs agency also said that the growth of cocaine use in
Britain and Spain had proved to be a precursor of a new boom in
cocaine use across Europe. The market has grown by a million new users
in the past year alone, making it the second most popular illegal drug
after cannabis.

In Britain, the typical cocaine customer is a weekend user who is
socially integrated, in work, and has probably switched from using
amphetamines.

The EU agency reports that the European cocaine market grew by 1
million users in the last year, from 3.5 million regular cocaine users
to 4.5 million. Spain has the highest level of cocaine abuse out of 29
countries across Europe, with consumption levels similar to the US. In
Spain, 5.2% of young adults aged 15-34 say they have used cocaine in
the last 12 months, compared with 4.7% in the UK.

The EU drug experts also said that the booming Afghan opium crop had
yet to have much impact on the heroin situation in Europe.
Drug-related deaths, however, remain at a historic high of between
7,000 and 8,000 each year across Europe.

The report expressed "cautious optimism" about the use of cannabis,
saying the European market had stabilised in the past year, with about
3 million using it on a daily basis and signs that its popularity
among the young is waning.

The agency reported that in Britain, cannabis use in the past 12
months among 16- to 24-year-olds has fallen sharply from 28.2% in 1998
to 21.4% in 2006.

Britain is no longer at the top of the European cannabis league among
people aged 15-34, with 16.3% using it in the last year compared with
20% for Spain, 19% for the Czech Republic and 16.5% for Italy.
Member Comments
No member comments available...