Pubdate: Mon, 26 Jul 2004 Source: Santa Barbara News-Press (CA) Copyright: 2004 Santa Barbara News-Press Contact: http://www.newspress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/393 Author: Rob Kuznia, Santa Barbara News-Press Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) POT USE INCREASES AMONG SANTA BARBARA STUDENTS Report: Tolerance, Access, Supply Play Role Marijuana use has risen among Santa Barbara's students in the past four years, even as it declined nationally during the same period. Local high school juniors are showing the largest increase. When asked if they had smoked marijuana in the past 30 days, 31 percent said "yes," compared to 23 percent in 1999, according to preliminary results of a survey to be released later this summer. The report comes amid growing concern over the increased potency of marijuana and as some local campuses plan stepped-up efforts to promote drug-free activities. Nationally, the news is good. The percentage of junior high and high school students who answered "yes" on the same question about recent use decreased across the board. For high school seniors -- the closest available comparison to the study of local juniors -- it fell from 23 to 21 percent, according to the latest study by the federal National Institute on Drug Abuse. The Santa Monica-based RAND Corporation conducted the local survey of high school juniors, ninth- and seventh-graders. The survey found marijuana use among ninth-graders had increased from 11 to 15 percent, while seventh-graders held steady at less than 5 percent. "It didn't surprise me terribly that what's declining (nationally) at a slow rate would be moving slower in places like Santa Barbara," said RAND researcher Pat Ebener. "In more affluent communities, you expect more supply and access." How Santa Barbara stacks up against specific cities won't be known until the final results are out. Vicente Rios, a junior at Santa Barbara High School, said the local marijuana statistics sound about right to him. Many students, he said, are getting high during their lunch and free periods and returning to school stoned. The students use eyedrops to remove the redness from their eyes, a side effect of smoking pot. "You can be like 30 minutes late for class and not be marked tardy," he noted. Some students say that Ecstasy, which creates a wave of psychedelic and stimulant effects, is gaining popularity. "It's more popular than (marijuana) bud," said a sophomore who identified himself only as Carlos. "At least it's being talked about more." The local survey didn't show an increase in use of drugs such as heroin and cocaine. It did not ask students about methamphetamine use, which officials say seems to be on the rise. In Santa Barbara, the number of students suspended for using illegal drugs has risen in three years, from 175 to 220 in 2003-04. The vast majority of those offenses are marijuana-related. Ms. Ebener said Santa Barbara and other California communities seem to be more tolerant of marijuana. That rings true to Santa Barbara police spokesman Paul McCaffrey, who noted that county leaders last month signed off on a program that would issue identification cards to patients who qualify for medical marijuana. "Public opinion of marijuana use certainly has changed very dramatically," he said. "The stigma about using marijuana has lessened." At the same time, the number of people arrested in Santa Barbara for driving while under the influence of the drug has increased significantly in five years, he said. Despite the local survey's findings, some educators say they haven't seen a noticeable increase in use. "I saw very little drug use (last year)," said Gerrie Fausett, the former principal of Santa Barbara Junior High School, who was recently promoted to a district office position. "Even paraphernalia, very little. . . . it comes and goes in waves." And Santa Barbara High School Principal Kristine Robertson said there's been "no discernible increase in marijuana use." Goleta Valley Junior High Principal Paul Turnbull said while he hasn't noticed increased drug use, he has heard more "talk" about drugs, marijuana in particular. Nevertheless, junior high and high school students likely will see subtle changes to curb drug usage beginning this fall. For instance, instead of targeting only students having the most problems, the drug and alcohol "youth service specialists" working as anti-drug advocates at every secondary campus will focus more on mainstream students. The specialists -- who are hired by the local nonprofit Council on Alcoholism and Drug Abuse, which contracts with the schools -- will refer students with the most severe problems to traditional school counselors. The schools this year also will provide more "sober activities," such as hiking trips, visits to amusement parks, and movie parties on weekend nights, said Penny Jenkins, the council's executive director. One official said the slight increase in marijuana use seems statistically irrelevant. "My sense is the use of marijuana . . . is not nearly as high as it was in the '60s and '70s," said Dr. Dave Bearman, the medical director at Zona Seca Treatment Center in Lompoc, and a longtime proponent of medical marijuana. "I say that from having a daughter at Dos Pueblos (High School) . . . and just talking with her." Potency: More Teens Getting Treatment As the potency of marijuana has risen in recent years, so has the number of South Coast teens in treatment for using the drug. The proportion of youths age 12 to 17 who are treated primarily for marijuana at the Daniel Bryant Youth and Family Treatment Center in Santa Barbara has climbed from about 70 percent in 2001 -- the year of its inception -- to 82 percent this past school year. The center serves about 200 children and teens. Two other local facilities offering treatment to teens -- Full Spectrum Recovery and Zona Seca -- reported similar increases. The higher potency of marijuana, and the resulting spike in treatment, has been getting more national attention of late. Nationally, the number of children and teenagers in treatment for marijuana dependence and abuse has jumped 142 percent since 1992, the Associated Press reported last week. Locally, partly in response to the increase, the Daniel Bryant Center is opening a new cannabis-use unit in the fall. "Kids are getting addicted," said Maria Long, spokeswoman for the center. "It's not considered a gateway drug anymore. It's considered a harmful drug." Average levels of THC, the active ingredient in marijuana, have risen steadily from 3.5 percent in 1988 to more than 7 percent in 2003, according to the University of Mississippi's Marijuana Potency Project. In the 1960s and 1970s, levels hovered around 2 percent, said Michelle Falvey, the clinical supervisor of the new Daniel Bryant program. Today, the strongest strains, known as "British Columbia bud," are up to 25 percent, she said. Some students say they are familiar with the boosted potency. A high school sophomore named Maria said she had a friend who recently went to a hospital emergency room after smoking marijuana and passing out at a party. Though her friend may have been drinking that night, he was a "marijuana addict" whose daily use of the drug had increased significantly, she said. "We kept telling him to stop," she said. "It's good to do it once in a while, but he kept doing it every day." While Cottage Hospital spokeswoman Janet O'Neill said emergency room workers there have not seen an increase in teenagers on marijuana, the national rate has more than tripled between 1994 and 2001, according to a recent report in the Los Angeles Times. The most frequent reason for the visits was an "unexpected reaction," rather than an "overdose," which happened 10 percent of the time, the report stated. John Williams, a school resource officer at Santa Barbara High School, said he witnessed the "unexpected reaction" phenomenon last year. "One time we had a big kid who . . . wouldn't let us put cuffs on him," he said. "It took four officers." The student, he said, wasn't acting violent, just confused and uncertain. "He didn't know how to react," he said. "It obscures your senses." Some consequences of heavy use among teens include truancy, academic failure, a difficulty in regulating moods and impulsive decision-making, officials said. The number of marijuana-smoking youth treated every week at Full Spectrum -- a substance-use outpatient facility with a "youth and marijuana" component -- has increased from approximately 20 to 40 in two years, said therapist Len Van Nostrand, one of the center's three founders. The number at Zona Seca has increased from about "one or two" 13 years ago to between 10 and 15 now, said Robbie Porter, a longtime employee there. At the Daniel Bryant Center, the new "cannabis-use" program, which officials hope will begin in November, will last six weeks and include family therapy. Though the center's current program accommodates kids with marijuana problems, its length -- a minimum of three months -- intimidates some families, Ms. Falvey said. "A parent may think, 'I've got a kid in treatment for six months (who is) doing drug testing all the time,' " she said. "It's a difficult pill to swallow." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake