Pubdate: Thu, 05 Sep 2002 Source: Indianapolis Star (IN) Copyright: 2002 Indianapolis Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.starnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/210 Author: Barb Berggoetz Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?158 (Club Drugs) YOUTH DRUG USE FALLS, BUT NEW WOES EMERGE Survey Finds That More Hoosier Students Are Trying 'Club Drugs' As They Reach Late Teens. While most illicit drug use by Indiana youths continued to decline, a 2002 statewide student survey confirmed the disturbing emergence of "club drugs" among some young teens. Use of these drugs -- including Ecstasy, GHB and Rohypnol -- is minimal among middle school students, but it grows slightly as students go through high school, reports the Indiana Prevention Resource Center at Indiana University in its 12th annual survey. "It's very scary to me," said Lisa Hutcheson, project director for the Indiana Coalition to Reduce Underage Drinking. "We have enough to worry about with drugs and alcohol." Nearly 80,000 students in sixth through 12th grades attending 269 schools were surveyed. The Indiana Division of Mental Health and Addiction funded the report. Less than 1 percent of middle-school students reported using Rohypnol and GHB, commonly known as date-rape drugs, at least once, while 1.5 percent of high school students did so. Use of Ecstasy, a mild hallucinogenic drug, before eighth grade is minimal, and at least one-time usage by older youths ranges from 3.4 percent of eighth-graders to 9.5 percent by high school seniors. However, about 2 percent of students in grades 10-12 reported using Ecstasy one or more times a month. IU applied health science professor William Bailey, the center's executive director, said these findings suggest Ecstasy use is more common among older adolescents nearing college age. Overall, Bailey says, the survey's results show the decline in illicit drug use is not as dramatic as those found five to seven years ago, but the decreases are still significant. For example, 33.7 percent of seniors reported annual use of marijuana, compared with 36.4 percent last year. Although use of marijuana and most other illicit drugs has declined during the past four years, their rates remain substantially higher than the rates reported in 1992. While youths appear to be experimenting less with alcohol, Bailey said, the rates for those who drink regularly did not change. Rates of binge drinking - -- five or more drinks at any one time -- did not decrease either. Among high school seniors, 31.5 percent reported binge drinking, and 6.5 percent said they drank alcohol daily. Only 1.9 percent of eighth- graders said they drank daily, but 15.5 percent reported binge drinking. An encouraging sign was decreases in tobacco use among nearly all grades, although the state is slightly above national averages. About 20 percent of seniors and 11.6 percent of ninth-graders reported daily smoking. The state's increasing enforcement of laws banning tobacco sales to youths should continue to reduce smoking and lead to fewer people moving on to other drugs, said Mark Pogue, the center's education and training coordinator. "If we can control youth access to tobacco, we can control illicit drug usage in the state." - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager