Pubdate: Fri, 05 Jan 2001 Source: State, The (SC) Copyright: 2001 The State Contact: (803)771-8639 Address: P.O. Box 1333, Columbia, SC 29202 Forum: http://www.thestate.com/ultraboard/ Website: http://www.thestate.com/ Author: Frank Davies DRUG CZAR'S FINAL REPORT WARNS OF INCREASE IN STEROID, ECSTASY USE WASHINGTON -- Drug use among teens is down 21 percent during the last two years, but steroids and club drugs such as ecstasy are increasingly popular with young Americans, according to drug control policy chief Barry McCaffrey's final annual report. McCaffrey, who leaves office Friday after five years as director of national drug policy, gave a largely positive appraisal Thursday of national trends and attitudes toward drug use, and said he's optimistic that the Bush administration will continue initiatives on prevention and treatment that he has pushed. "Drug-related murders are down by half, and adolescent drug use is in decline," McCaffrey said at a White House briefing. "I can't imagine that there isn't widespread unanimity that we need to continue prevention, education and treatment. I'm very upbeat about the new team." But McCaffrey warned about the "explosive increase" in designer or club drugs such as methylenedioxymethamphetamine, commonly called ecstasy. Several surveys showed nearly a doubling of its use by high school students in the last two years. "They think it's a dance-all-night, feel-good drug," said McCaffrey, adding that users don't realize it can permanently impair brain functions. His report cited another danger, especially visible in Florida nightclubs: "Growing numbers of users -- primarily in the Miami and Orlando areas -- combine MDMA with heroin, a practice known as 'rolling.' If this trend continues, MDMA may become a 'gateway' drug that leads to the consumption of other substances." McCaffrey said steroid use also has increased in recent years among youths who want to excel at high school sports or "even Little League baseball." By contrast, a collection of surveys of household use and emergency room reports shows a 21 percent decline in overall drug use by kids 12 to 17 since 1997. The surveys show that overall rates of use for cocaine and heroin have stabilized since 1992, while young adults' use of marijuana has increased. McCaffrey credited more effective education campaigns and community-based programs, a factor cited by President Clinton. "Adolescents increasingly disapprove of illegal drugs, and a growing number are using positive peer pressure to help friends stay away from drugs," Clinton said in a statement. Dr. Donald Vereen, McCaffrey's deputy director, said better surveys and studies of the real impact of drug use have helped focus resources. "Data, not dogma, is keeping us ahead of the curve," Vereen said. "We're able to respond much more quickly than we did, for example, to crack (cocaine) when it hit the country, when it invaded Miami and headed up the East Coast and across the United States." McCaffrey said the "great unfinished business" facing the new administration is helping to remove the stigma of drug treatment and providing insurance coverage and heath care for addicts. In assessing enforcement problems in the hemisphere, McCaffrey said he was pleased with efforts by the new Vicente Fox administration in Mexico but warned that Colombia continued to face "enormous problems" from narco-traffickers. He called for continued U.S. aid to Colombia. "These are 40 million people three hours' flight from Miami who have a huge importance politically, culturally, economically to the United States, and we intend to stand with them," he said. Last summer, President Clinton signed a bill authorizing the United States' $1.3 billion contribution to Plan Colombia, a multicountry aid package to help Colombia battle drug trafficking. McCaffrey, a retired four-star Army general and Gulf War commander, plans to write a book about his experiences as drug control policy chief. In three weeks he begins teaching a course on national security at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. He leaves his post as part of the transition between the Clinton and Bush administrations. No one has been appointed yet to take his place. Though McCaffrey often uses military language, he has been careful to avoid the term "drug war." "The metaphor of 'war on drugs' is misleading," he said. "Although wars are expected to end, drug education is a continuous process. The moment we believe ourselves victorious and drop our guard, drug abuse will resurface in the next generation." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk