Pubdate: Sun, 13 Jul 2003
Source: Daily News (KY)
Copyright: 2003 News Publishing LLC
Contact:  http://www.bgdailynews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1218

FAITH ENLISTED IN FIGHT AGAINST TEEN DRUG USE

Former first lady Nancy Reagan led her famous fight against drugs with a 
"Just Say No" campaign. That and many other anti-drug programs have been 
attempted through the years. Many have had some measure of success. But 
there is a continuing need for anti-drug efforts, especially among the 
nation's young people.

Enter the Bush administration's plan to take a faith-based approach. The 
Office of National Drug Control Policy is now offering guides, brochures 
and Web sites to help leaders of religious youth groups teach their members 
to avoid marijuana and other drugs.

Not that the news about drug use is all bad. It is not.

Use of several illicit drugs is down, according to "Monitoring the Future," 
an exhaustive survey of eighth-, 10th- and 12-grade students. The report 
says that 2002 was a more positive year than in most recent years in terms 
of drug use among students.

Of particular concern in recent years has the been use of ecstasy. The many 
warnings about the drug appear to be having some success; 2002 was the 
first time in recent years that its use among American teenagers dropped. 
In general, overall drug and alcohol consumption was in decline.

With such encouraging numbers, some might question the need to continue to 
make tackling the drug problems among the young such a high priority. But 
when a problem is on the run, that is the time to keep pursuing success and 
elimination.

Even with the successful strides made in recent years against the drug 
problem, substance abuse still remains high among the nation's teenagers.

According to the same survey: 53 percent have tried an illicit drug by the 
time they finish high school; 30 percent have used some illicit drug other 
than marijuana by the time they graduate or leave school; and two of those 
three have done so in the 12 months prior to the survey. One of the biggest 
contributors to the continuing drug problem is the introduction of new 
drugs, which are really just a comeback by - or variations of - older 
drugs. LSD, methamphetamine, heroin, cocaine, PCP and crack made comebacks 
in the past decade after their initial popularity faded.

Alcohol use also remains high among teens. Nearly 80 percent have consumed 
alcohol - more than just a few sips - by the end of high school. More than 
half of high school seniors and 21 percent of eighth-graders said they had 
been drunk at least once in their young lives.

The Bush plan would help mesh the faith community's ability to speak to 
moral and spiritual behavior with specific activities directed toward 
preventing teen substance abuse. Research suggests that religion still 
plays a major role in the life of America's teens. This positions churches, 
temples and mosques to make a difference by instilling drug antidotes, 
including how to cope with negative peer pressure.

Critics of Bush's direction toward faith-based approach say such 
initiatives violate the principles of the separation of church and state. 
They do not. In addressing drug use, the administration will offer guides, 
brochures and Web information to help youth group leaders teach their young 
people to avoid drugs.

It is a reasonable approach toward keeping America's future - it's young 
people - safe, healthy and alive for the future.
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