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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Drug Use Among Teen-Agers Leveling Out, Report Says
Title:US: Drug Use Among Teen-Agers Leveling Out, Report Says
Published On:1998-12-19
Source:Los Angeles Daily News (CA)
Fetched On:2008-09-06 17:28:46
DRUG USE AMONG TEEN-AGERS LEVELING OUT, REPORT SAYS

Teen drug use has stabilized after years on the rise, the government
reported Friday, though it's still much higher than in the early 1990s.

Drug use rose through most of this decade after the intense prevention
efforts of the '80s were relaxed, researchers say. But now schools, parents
and TV are again focused on the dangers, and researchers say teens are again
getting the message.

The annual report has now marked two straight years of steady - and in some
cases, dropping - drug and alcohol use, suggesting that the rising trend
truly has been stemmed.

"Last year we said there was a `glimmer of hope,' " said Donna Shalala,
secretary of Health and Human Services. "Today, that glimmer of hope is not
only still with us, it has actually grown."

The survey of eighth-, 10th- and 12th-graders also found more adolescents
disapprove of drug use. And, in a particularly bright spot, younger teen-
agers are even less likely to use drugs than last year.

"It's the best news we've had to give the country for some years now," said
veteran lead researcher Lloyd Johnston of the University of Michigan.

Teen drug use became a serious problem in the late 1960s, peaking in 1979.
It then fell through the 1980s, hitting a low in 1991 and 1992 before
beginning to climb again.

Johnston suggested a pattern: When use was lower, teens saw fewer peers
suffering from the effect of drugs.

"They weren't seeing the consequences," he said.

At the same time, reduced drug use in the late 1980s allowed the news media,
parents and schools to relax and cut back on prevention efforts, he said.
Federal spending on prevention remained stagnant through the early and mid-
1990s.

"All the institutions that might be influencing young people were tiring of
the issue," he said.

Now, he and others suggested, teens are again hearing more anti-drug
messages and seeing the effects of drug use on others.

"America's team effort is starting to pay off," said Barry McCaffrey,
director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy.

He promised the nation would not let down its efforts again. "We learn by
seeing others make mistakes," he said.

Still, nine in 10 high school seniors say it's easy to get marijuana, and
the number using is still unacceptable, said Chuck Thomas of the Marijuana
Policy Project, which supports relaxation of drug laws.

Nearly one in four eighth-graders and almost half of high school seniors
reported smoking marijuana at least once.

Checked-by: Don Beck
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