News (Media Awareness Project) - US MT: Freudenthal, Panel Focus On Juvenile Drug Use |
Title: | US MT: Freudenthal, Panel Focus On Juvenile Drug Use |
Published On: | 2004-10-29 |
Source: | Billings Gazette, The (MT) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-17 20:31:48 |
FREUDENTHAL, PANEL FOCUS ON JUVENILE DRUG USE
CHEYENNE -- While the use of illicit drugs continues to pose problems,
alcohol is the biggest menace to Wyoming's youth, Gov. Dave Freudenthal
said during a panel discussion.
The forum was held Thursday as part of Red Ribbon Week, which focuses on
the dangers of drug abuse.
"Alcohol kills more kids than all illegal drugs combined," Freudenthal
said. "Alcohol is the single largest killer of young people in this country."
Freudenthal said the problem of underage drinking doesn't necessarily
belong to the 20-year-olds. Kids as young as 12, 13 and 14 are engaging in
binge drinking or other unhealthy excesses, he said.
Many Wyoming youths also have their first drink before the fourth grade,
Freudenthal said.
Kurt Dobbs, director of the state Division of Criminal Investigation, said
methamphetamine is growing in usage, and he likened it to a three-pronged
monster because it attacks victims physically, mentally and environmentally.
The drug increases crime and endangers children who are exposed to labs and
addicts, he said.
Dobbs said during a recent undercover operation he met a woman who was
eight months pregnant and begging for the drug.
Marijuana also is a problem, and arguments that it can be used as a
medicine are false, said Glenn Gaasche, local bureau director for the U.S.
Drug Enforcement Administration.
He said groups such as the Institute of Medicine, the National Multiple
Sclerosis Society and the Center for Medical Cannabis Research have all
determined that marijuana has no future as a medicine.
Gaasche said instead of helping ailments such as glaucoma, marijuana
actually creates new ones such as heart disease. He said advocates for
legalization appeal to emotions and not logic.
Groups with names such as Americans for Medical Rights imply the government
is trying to keep medicine from sick people, he said, adding that efforts
to try drug legalization in Europe have not worked.
An experiment to legalize heroin in Switzerland increased the number of
addicts from about 700 to 20,000 within five years, Gaasche said.
Heather Cassell, a pediatrician at F.E. Warren Air Force Base, said
conditions such as undiagnosed cognitive disorders or depression can
trigger drug use in adolescents.
"If a person thinks highly of themselves, they won't abuse their bodies,"
she said.
Inhalants such as cans of whipping cream, spray paint and glue are often
the first drug teenagers try because they're inexpensive and readily
available. Those are dangerous and can cause brain damage, Cassell said,
and be a gateway to other drugs.
Tobacco also is considered a gateway drug, she said.
In 2001, 85 percent of the nation's high school seniors had tried alcohol,
51 percent had tried marijuana, 12.8 percent methamphetamines, 12.1 percent
cocaine and 3 percent heroin or other opiate drugs.
Parents should get to know their child so they can identify trigger
symptoms like anxiety and depression, Cassell said. She also said parents
should be aware that drug abuse does not affect a specific cultural,
socioeconomic or social background.
"Just because you think you have the picture-perfect child doesn't mean
they're not exposed to it or they're not at risk," she said.
Freudenthal said parents should be aware that their own behavior affects
their children. He said kids are aware if adults around them need alcohol
to have a good time.
He said parents also should be honest with their kids and that every parent
will probably be asked if they ever drank alcohol underage. Just because a
parent was once a reckless youngster doesn't make it right, he said.
Freudenthal said the difference between when he was a kid and today is that
experimentation hits more frequently and much sooner.
"If you think your kid is drinking, they probably are," he said. "If you
think your child is not drinking, they probably are."
CHEYENNE -- While the use of illicit drugs continues to pose problems,
alcohol is the biggest menace to Wyoming's youth, Gov. Dave Freudenthal
said during a panel discussion.
The forum was held Thursday as part of Red Ribbon Week, which focuses on
the dangers of drug abuse.
"Alcohol kills more kids than all illegal drugs combined," Freudenthal
said. "Alcohol is the single largest killer of young people in this country."
Freudenthal said the problem of underage drinking doesn't necessarily
belong to the 20-year-olds. Kids as young as 12, 13 and 14 are engaging in
binge drinking or other unhealthy excesses, he said.
Many Wyoming youths also have their first drink before the fourth grade,
Freudenthal said.
Kurt Dobbs, director of the state Division of Criminal Investigation, said
methamphetamine is growing in usage, and he likened it to a three-pronged
monster because it attacks victims physically, mentally and environmentally.
The drug increases crime and endangers children who are exposed to labs and
addicts, he said.
Dobbs said during a recent undercover operation he met a woman who was
eight months pregnant and begging for the drug.
Marijuana also is a problem, and arguments that it can be used as a
medicine are false, said Glenn Gaasche, local bureau director for the U.S.
Drug Enforcement Administration.
He said groups such as the Institute of Medicine, the National Multiple
Sclerosis Society and the Center for Medical Cannabis Research have all
determined that marijuana has no future as a medicine.
Gaasche said instead of helping ailments such as glaucoma, marijuana
actually creates new ones such as heart disease. He said advocates for
legalization appeal to emotions and not logic.
Groups with names such as Americans for Medical Rights imply the government
is trying to keep medicine from sick people, he said, adding that efforts
to try drug legalization in Europe have not worked.
An experiment to legalize heroin in Switzerland increased the number of
addicts from about 700 to 20,000 within five years, Gaasche said.
Heather Cassell, a pediatrician at F.E. Warren Air Force Base, said
conditions such as undiagnosed cognitive disorders or depression can
trigger drug use in adolescents.
"If a person thinks highly of themselves, they won't abuse their bodies,"
she said.
Inhalants such as cans of whipping cream, spray paint and glue are often
the first drug teenagers try because they're inexpensive and readily
available. Those are dangerous and can cause brain damage, Cassell said,
and be a gateway to other drugs.
Tobacco also is considered a gateway drug, she said.
In 2001, 85 percent of the nation's high school seniors had tried alcohol,
51 percent had tried marijuana, 12.8 percent methamphetamines, 12.1 percent
cocaine and 3 percent heroin or other opiate drugs.
Parents should get to know their child so they can identify trigger
symptoms like anxiety and depression, Cassell said. She also said parents
should be aware that drug abuse does not affect a specific cultural,
socioeconomic or social background.
"Just because you think you have the picture-perfect child doesn't mean
they're not exposed to it or they're not at risk," she said.
Freudenthal said parents should be aware that their own behavior affects
their children. He said kids are aware if adults around them need alcohol
to have a good time.
He said parents also should be honest with their kids and that every parent
will probably be asked if they ever drank alcohol underage. Just because a
parent was once a reckless youngster doesn't make it right, he said.
Freudenthal said the difference between when he was a kid and today is that
experimentation hits more frequently and much sooner.
"If you think your kid is drinking, they probably are," he said. "If you
think your child is not drinking, they probably are."
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