Pubdate: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 Source: Evansville Courier & Press (IN) Copyright: 2003 The Evansville Courier Contact: http://www.courierpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/138 Author: Michelle Brutlag, Courier & Press staff writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) FIRST TASTE OF ALCOHOL, THE GATEWAY DRUG, OFTEN LEADS TEENAGERS TO HARDER STUFF After she had her first taste of alcohol in the sixth-grade, Roxanne never looked back. Now 17, she's recovering from the years of substance abuse that began with alcohol, her gateway drug. By the time she entered Mulberry Center's rehabilitation program for teens at age 16, she had graduated to drugs like marijuana, acid, opium and methamphetamine. "Basically, I did everything but coke, crack and heroin," she said. And it was surprising how easy it was to get. A simple trip to the convenience store could net gas for her car, a pack or two of smokes and drugs. "All in one run," she said. Drug dealers, or people who knew them, would hang out at the store, she said. Research proves that alcohol, which Roxanne began drinking before she even entered high school, is often a gateway drug to harder substances like marijuana and meth. As a young adult who began drinking before she could drive, Roxanne is not alone in the Tri-State. In a 2002 survey conducted by the Indiana Prevention Resource Center, nearly twice as many Indiana 12th graders reported daily use of alcohol than the national average. At all grade levels compared, Indiana came out either equal to or greater than the national average for daily use, monthly use and binge drinking, considered five or more drinks in one sitting. Youth First, a substance abuse prevention group, and WNIN-PBS9 have teamed up to address the issue of underage drinking in our community, beginning tonight with a town hall forum to be aired on WNIN PBS-9. Tonight's forum will be the first of a series of town hall meetings over the next five months, each dealing with a different segment of the problem, including prevention, intervention and policy reforms and social norms. The project was made possible through several grants, including a national Sound Partners for Community Health grant and additional funding from the local Welborn Foundation. The Courier & Press interviewed several teenagers about the problem of underage drinking and will not publish their last names because they are minors. Roxanne said her parents would never have learned of her drug and alcohol use. But she decided to come clean. "I could lie and tell them it was my friend's, or I could tell the truth," she said. "I wrote my parents a really long letter saying that I needed help." That was a little more than a year ago. Last week, Roxanne, celebrated a year of sobriety. Vincent, another 17-year-old, has been sober for nearly six months. He came to Mulberry Center after drinking himself into a stupor at a party and ending up in the hospital after a fight. "My parents realized I was extremely impaired," he said. His drinking habit started out innocently enough, he said, with a few drinks at a friend's house. A friend's older brother purchased the alcohol. And it quickly escalated into weekend-long binges where he would down fifths of whiskey and cases of beer. The drinking would happen at a friend's house with no parents home. "My parents didn't realize what I was doing over there," he said. Since entering treatment last summer, Vincent's life has changed. He found it impossible to stay at his home school, and changed schools twice before finding one that fit. Roxanne has also changed schools since entering treatment. Both teens said they had read or been told that maturity slows or stops when a person becomes addicted. Dr. William Wooten, who directs the treatment of adolescent alcoholics and drug addicts at Mulberry Center and founded Youth First, said younger brains are more vulnerable to alcohol and other drugs. "If somebody starts using young, it's usually because its available, it's socially acceptable or they're being stressed or influenced by other risk factors," Wooten said. Risk factors include depression, eating disorders, physical or emotional abuse, frequent moves, and transitions between schools. Also, he said kids who start using young have stunted emotional development. "We see this clinically in adults and kids, in that as far as their behavior and their emotional development, they're often immature for their years," he said. "Their judgment, social skills, their decision making and so forth are not what they should be." Both Vincent and Roxanne became very manipulative, they said, and could turn their parents naivete or denial to their advantage. "My parents had to know (I was an addict), but they didn't," Roxanne said. "I had posters of pot leaves and one of a Rasta man smoking a joint hanging in my room." "Parents don't want to believe their child has a problem," Vincent said. "You know those commercials, where they ask the kids when, where and who were you with? That's something they can do." Wooten said only about 5 percent of people with drug and alcohol addictions seek treatment - the other 95 percent of people die without it. "Similarly, out of every dollar we spend to deal with problems related to substance abuse, about 95 cents is spent on the consequences, like car wrecks, injuries, law enforcement, work-related accidents, and only 5 cents is spent on treatment," Wooten said. Prevention is much cheaper: Wooten pointed to Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Statistics that indicated turning one person away from drugs and alcohol can save the community more than $2 million throughout the course of their lifetime. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk