Pubdate: Wed, 24 Oct 2001 Source: The Post and Courier (SC) Copyright: 2001 Evening Post Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.charleston.net/index.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/567 Author: Lynne Langley STUDY: TEEN DRUG USE LINKED TO DISSATISFACTION South Carolina high school students are far more likely to use drugs and to start using them sooner if the teens are dissatisfied with their lives, University of South Carolina researchers reported Tuesday. Teens who are satisfied with their lives are less apt to try or use drugs ranging from alcohol to marijuana, cocaine and heroin. "The consistent association between kids who are not happy and kids who use drugs is amazing," said Dr. Robert F. Valois, a USC public health researcher who studies teen risk behavior. Valois studied 5,032 public high school students across South Carolina. Studies often show a link with males, but not females, or blacks, but not whites, he added. This also represents the most comprehensive study to examine adolescents' life satisfaction and substance abuse, according to USC psychology professor Dr. Scott Huebner, co-author of the study. White females were nearly 12 times more likely to use cocaine at age 13 or younger if they were dissatisfied, white males 12 times more likely, black males nearly 17 times more likely and black females more than four times more likely than if they were satisfied. Dissatisfied black males were nearly 12 times more likely than satisfied counterparts to have tried crack or freebase in their lifetime. For white females the rate was four times, black females six times and white males three times more likely. For injecting illegal drugs, white females were nearly six times more likely, white males five times and black males nearly 12 times more likely if they were dissatisfied with life. The study does not determine whether teens' dissatisfaction causes them to use alcohol and other drugs or whether their substance abuse is leading to their unhappiness, said Keith Zullig, a USC doctoral candidate and lead author of the study, published in the latest edition of the Journal of Adolescent Health. It's important that so many teens are abusing substances, Zullig said, noting concern that about 25 percent of students reported trying cigarettes before age 13. For the study, the researchers added questions on life satisfaction to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Youth Risk Behavior Survey. Students were asked to rate their satisfaction in six areas, including family, friendships, school and overall life, on a scale of one to seven, from terrible to delighted. The dissatisfied group chose any of the three bottom ratings, the satisfied any of the top three. Dissatisfied white females stood out most dramatically. They were significantly more likely to have tried or be using the drug in all 21 questions while the count was 16 of 21 for black females, black males and white males. Dissatisfied students were more than twice as apt to inhale glue and gas, which Valois described as readily available and inexpensive. For cocaine, lifetime use was four times as high among dissatisfied girls, nearly three times for white males and nearly six times for black males. While 75 percent of all students reported having used alcohol at least once, the rate was about twice as high for dissatisfied teens as satisfied. Principals, doctors, counselors and others might employ the satisfaction questions to determine which students are more likely to be using drugs, something students may not want to discuss, Valois said. - --- MAP posted-by: Rebel