Pubdate: Thu, 02 Mar 2000 Source: Gary Post-Tribune, The (IN) Copyright: 2000 Post-Tribune Publishing Contact: 1065 Broadway, Gary IN 46402-2998 Fax: (219) 881-3234 Website: http://www.post-trib.com/ Author: Jeannine Athens IS YOUR CHILD LIKELY TO USE ILLICIT DRUGS? Online Test Could Answer The Question VALPARAISO - Watching a child struggle with a drug or alcohol problem is a nightmare most parents would rather prevent than face. The task is in catching a problem before it exists. "Many of us have said, 'If only I would have known ahead of time,' " said Sharon Cawood, director of the Porter County Substance Abuse Prevention Council. Now there is a way for parents to detect chemical usage or the proclivity to such usage online using the highly accurate Substance Abuse Subtle Screening Inventory, or SASSI, test. Within a short time this tests will also be available for voluntary participation at high school driver education programs in Lake and Porter counties. Parents can find the test online for $30 at www.proscreening.net/porter "It can give the parents prevention skills to look at regarding their child," said Cawood, who included SASSI test information in the council's recently published parent's guide. "The parent would know if there is a problem or even a risk." The SASSI test is medically proven, with accuracy rates from 93 percent for early stage identification to 98 percent for later stages, said Stewart Cooper, director of Valparaiso University's Counseling Services and director of the university's psychology graduate program. "The SASSI itself is very effective, probably the most effective out there in picking up people with a high proclivity, who are likely to develop a problem," said Cooper, who studied an internship under the test developer. A Valparaiso University group working on an accident-predictability project is teaming with school superintendents in Lake and Porter counties to incorporate the SASSI test in driver education programs. The test will be available in some Lake County high schools as early as this year. What makes the driver's education application so appealing is that the classes are a gathering point, a unique opportunity to screen a majority of adolescents - and at a point in their lives when early identification is most beneficial. The SASSI consists of nine scales based on 55 hypothetical true-false questions related to chemical abuse and 26 questions that allow respondents to self-report drug or alcohol use. Unlike "face valid" questionnaires, the SASSI does not depend on the honesty of the responder for accurate results. There is no seemingly right or wrong way to answer some true-false questions like, "I believe that sometimes people get confused" or "Most people will laugh at a joke at times." "You can't know what way to answer," Cooper said. The answers do, however, give the examiner an insight into the person. After the child takes the test, parents receive a letter stating whether the child does or does not meet the criteria for chemical dependency, at what degree of risk for chemical dependency the child seems or if the validity of the test is in question. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart