News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Study: Parents In Denial As Teens' Drug Use Grows |
Title: | US: Study: Parents In Denial As Teens' Drug Use Grows |
Published On: | 2007-08-18 |
Source: | Inland Valley Daily Bulletin (Ontario, CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-12 00:02:07 |
STUDY: PARENTS IN DENIAL AS TEENS' DRUG USE GROWS
WASHINGTON - Teenagers say drug problems at school are getting worse,
and parents express doubts about ever making such schools drug free,
a new study says.
The percentage of teens who say they attend high schools with drug
problems has increased from 44 percent to 61 percent since 2002, and
the percentage in middle schools has increased from 19 percent to 31
percent, according to the survey to be released Thursday by Columbia
University's National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse.
Four in five teens in high school told researchers they have
witnessed the use, sale or possession of illegal drugs on high school
grounds, or seen someone who was drunk or high on campus.
Some 13 percent of teens said they had tried marijuana, and 4 percent
said they had used it in the past month. Such survey results are
often understated because respondents are hesitant to admit such drug use.
The survey also found:
About six in 10 parents of teens at schools with a drug problem say
they believe the goal of making that school drug free is unrealistic.
Most parents, 86 percent, say drinking is a big part of the college
experience, but only 29 percent think their own teens will do a lot
of drinking in college.
Students who consider themselves popular were more likely to use
drugs, drink or smoke than students who do not view themselves as popular.
The survey found 24 percent of teens named drugs as their No. 1
concern, down from 32 percent who listed it as a top concern in 1995.
"It has become such a commonplace experience for teens that their
concern about it has come down," said Joseph Califano, the center's
chairman and president. "We've reached a point now in America's high
schools where getting high, getting drunk are so common - drugs are
now imbedded in the high school experience. And despair and denial
characterize the parents' attitudes."
The survey of 1,063 teens from 12 to 17 years old and 550 parents was
conducted from April 2 to May 13 and has a margin of sampling error
of plus or minus 3 percentage points for the teen sample and 4
percentage points for the parents.
WASHINGTON - Teenagers say drug problems at school are getting worse,
and parents express doubts about ever making such schools drug free,
a new study says.
The percentage of teens who say they attend high schools with drug
problems has increased from 44 percent to 61 percent since 2002, and
the percentage in middle schools has increased from 19 percent to 31
percent, according to the survey to be released Thursday by Columbia
University's National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse.
Four in five teens in high school told researchers they have
witnessed the use, sale or possession of illegal drugs on high school
grounds, or seen someone who was drunk or high on campus.
Some 13 percent of teens said they had tried marijuana, and 4 percent
said they had used it in the past month. Such survey results are
often understated because respondents are hesitant to admit such drug use.
The survey also found:
About six in 10 parents of teens at schools with a drug problem say
they believe the goal of making that school drug free is unrealistic.
Most parents, 86 percent, say drinking is a big part of the college
experience, but only 29 percent think their own teens will do a lot
of drinking in college.
Students who consider themselves popular were more likely to use
drugs, drink or smoke than students who do not view themselves as popular.
The survey found 24 percent of teens named drugs as their No. 1
concern, down from 32 percent who listed it as a top concern in 1995.
"It has become such a commonplace experience for teens that their
concern about it has come down," said Joseph Califano, the center's
chairman and president. "We've reached a point now in America's high
schools where getting high, getting drunk are so common - drugs are
now imbedded in the high school experience. And despair and denial
characterize the parents' attitudes."
The survey of 1,063 teens from 12 to 17 years old and 550 parents was
conducted from April 2 to May 13 and has a margin of sampling error
of plus or minus 3 percentage points for the teen sample and 4
percentage points for the parents.
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