Pubdate: Sat, 19 Feb 2000 Source: Examiner, The (Ireland) Copyright: Examiner Publications Ltd, 2000 Contact: http://www.examiner.ie/ Author: Caroline O'Doherty EXPERT WARNS ON USE OF DRUG SCARE TACTICS PARENTS who use scare tactics to keep their children from experimenting with drugs leave their offspring more vulnerable to the lure of drugs, an expert has warned. Steve Harding, drugs education officer with the Eastern Health Board, said continually presenting the worst case scenario lost parents all credibility with their youngsters. "We do it all the time. We say stop running on the stairs or you'll fall down and break your neck. We never just say you'll scrape your elbow." "The trouble is, when kids start experimenting with drugs and they don't fall down dead instantly like they've been warned, but instead find they enjoy it, they know somebody has lied to them. That somebody has lost all credibility." Mr Harding urged parents to be realistic in their discussions with their children about drugs but said they should not even attempt a discussion without first informing themselves. "You need to give age relevant information so, of course, you don't tell a child of seven there's anything good about drugs but if you have a sophisticated teenage audience, you can be sure they know as much, and probably more, about drugs than you do." Mr Harding criticised the lack of a coordinated national approach to drugs education. Schools were not all using the same drugs resource material and the Gardai, parents and the media were all sending out different messages as well, he said. "If there are conflicting messages going out to young people, they will reject them and they may reject the very one they should be taking in." Mr Harding urged all schools to make use of the Department of Education's drugs education material, and encouraged parents and schools to work in tandem so that parents knew what their children were learning and what approach was being taken to their drugs education. Mr Harding was speaking at a conference on Young People and Drugs in Dublin yesterday. Another speaker, Midlands Health Board GP Coordinator, Jimmy Connolly, called for more evaluation of education programmes. He said there was nothing to show any of the programmes in use were having any effect or that one programme was more successful than another. Chris Murphy of Crosscare urged greater use of peer educators in drug awareness programmes. Crosscare runs four programmes, in which teenagers and young adults from areas badly affected by drugs are trained as mentors for their peers. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk