News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Drug Use Shifts |
Title: | US: Drug Use Shifts |
Published On: | 2004-09-13 |
Source: | Christian Science Monitor (US) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-18 00:18:00 |
DRUG USE SHIFTS
A new government report shows fewer young people in America using
drugs like marijuana, Ecstasy, and LSD - good news indeed, and some
evidence that antidrug campaigns continue to work.
The 2003 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, released last week,
found a 5 percentage point decline in the number of 12- to
17-year-olds who had ever tried marijuana from 2002, and a 30
percentage point decline in the number of 12- and 13-year-olds who had
used the drug within a month of the survey.
But the study also found smoking and drinking levels remained
disturbingly static. Fifty-four million kids and adults binged on
alcohol at least once before taking the survey, and only an estimated
3.3 million of those were treated. The study also confirms a troubling
trend - a rise in the abuse of prescription drugs. In fact, 32.1
million Americans over age 12 reported using a prescription drug for a
non-medical (read: recreational) use - up from 29.6 million the year
before.
Society must sound greater warnings about the dangers of abusing
prescription drugs, and work to develop more effective education and
drug-treatment programs for youths and adults. States also can create
better ways of monitoring pharmacies that dispense controlled substances.
A new government report shows fewer young people in America using
drugs like marijuana, Ecstasy, and LSD - good news indeed, and some
evidence that antidrug campaigns continue to work.
The 2003 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, released last week,
found a 5 percentage point decline in the number of 12- to
17-year-olds who had ever tried marijuana from 2002, and a 30
percentage point decline in the number of 12- and 13-year-olds who had
used the drug within a month of the survey.
But the study also found smoking and drinking levels remained
disturbingly static. Fifty-four million kids and adults binged on
alcohol at least once before taking the survey, and only an estimated
3.3 million of those were treated. The study also confirms a troubling
trend - a rise in the abuse of prescription drugs. In fact, 32.1
million Americans over age 12 reported using a prescription drug for a
non-medical (read: recreational) use - up from 29.6 million the year
before.
Society must sound greater warnings about the dangers of abusing
prescription drugs, and work to develop more effective education and
drug-treatment programs for youths and adults. States also can create
better ways of monitoring pharmacies that dispense controlled substances.
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